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Hox genes maintain critical roles in the adult skeleton
by
Raines, Ronald T.
, Wellik, Deneen M.
, Song, Jane Y.
, Pineault, Kyriel M.
, Dones, Jesús M.
in
Biological Sciences
/ Biomedical materials
/ Bone matrix
/ Cbfa-1 protein
/ Cell differentiation
/ Collagen
/ Dendrites
/ Embryogenesis
/ Embryonic growth stage
/ Fibers
/ Genes
/ Genetics
/ Homeostasis
/ HOX gene
/ Lamellar bone
/ Morphology
/ Mutants
/ Osteoblastogenesis
/ Osteoblasts
/ Osteocalcin
/ Osteopontin
/ Radius
/ Skeleton
/ SOST protein
/ Stem cells
/ Ulna
2020
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Hox genes maintain critical roles in the adult skeleton
by
Raines, Ronald T.
, Wellik, Deneen M.
, Song, Jane Y.
, Pineault, Kyriel M.
, Dones, Jesús M.
in
Biological Sciences
/ Biomedical materials
/ Bone matrix
/ Cbfa-1 protein
/ Cell differentiation
/ Collagen
/ Dendrites
/ Embryogenesis
/ Embryonic growth stage
/ Fibers
/ Genes
/ Genetics
/ Homeostasis
/ HOX gene
/ Lamellar bone
/ Morphology
/ Mutants
/ Osteoblastogenesis
/ Osteoblasts
/ Osteocalcin
/ Osteopontin
/ Radius
/ Skeleton
/ SOST protein
/ Stem cells
/ Ulna
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Hox genes maintain critical roles in the adult skeleton
by
Raines, Ronald T.
, Wellik, Deneen M.
, Song, Jane Y.
, Pineault, Kyriel M.
, Dones, Jesús M.
in
Biological Sciences
/ Biomedical materials
/ Bone matrix
/ Cbfa-1 protein
/ Cell differentiation
/ Collagen
/ Dendrites
/ Embryogenesis
/ Embryonic growth stage
/ Fibers
/ Genes
/ Genetics
/ Homeostasis
/ HOX gene
/ Lamellar bone
/ Morphology
/ Mutants
/ Osteoblastogenesis
/ Osteoblasts
/ Osteocalcin
/ Osteopontin
/ Radius
/ Skeleton
/ SOST protein
/ Stem cells
/ Ulna
2020
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Journal Article
Hox genes maintain critical roles in the adult skeleton
2020
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Overview
Hox genes are indispensable for the proper patterning of the skeletal morphology of the axial and appendicular skeleton during embryonic development. Recently, it has been demonstrated that Hox expression continues from embryonic stages through postnatal and adult stages exclusively in a skeletal stem cell population. However, whether Hox genes continue to function after development has not been rigorously investigated. We generated a Hoxd11 conditional allele and induced genetic deletion at adult stages to show that Hox11 genes play critical roles in skeletal homeostasis of the forelimb zeugopod (radius and ulna). Conditional loss of Hox11 function at adult stages leads to replacement of normal lamellar bone with an abnormal woven bone-like matrix of highly disorganized collagen fibers. Examining the lineage from the Hox-expressing mutant cells demonstrates no loss of stem cell population. Differentiation in the osteoblast lineage initiates with Runx2 expression, which is observed similarly in mutants and controls. With loss of Hox11 function, however, osteoblasts fail to mature, with no progression to osteopontin or osteocalcin expression. Osteocyte-like cells become embedded within the abnormal bony matrix, but they completely lack dendrites, as well as the characteristic lacuno-canalicular network, and do not express SOST. Together, our studies show that Hox11 genes continuously function in the adult skeleton in a region-specific manner by regulating differentiation of Hox-expressing skeletal stem cells into the osteolineage.
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