The alpha/beta carboxy-terminal domains of p63 are required for skin and limb development. New insights from the Brdm2 mouse which is not a complete p63 knockout but expresses p63 gamma-like proteins

2009 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​The alpha/beta carboxy-terminal domains of p63 are required for skin and limb development. New insights from the Brdm2 mouse which is not a complete p63 knockout but expresses p63 gamma-like proteins​
Wolff, S.; Talos, F.; Palacios, G.; Beyer, U.; Dobbelstein, M.   & Moll, U. M.​ (2009) 
Cell Death and Differentiation16(8) pp. 1108​-1117​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2009.25 

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Authors
Wolff, S.; Talos, Flaminia; Palacios, Gustavo; Beyer, Ulrike; Dobbelstein, Matthias ; Moll, Ute M.
Abstract
p63, an ancestral transcription factor of the p53 family, has three C-terminal isoforms whose relative in vivo functions are elusive. The p63 gene is essential for skin and limb development, as vividly shown by two independent global knockout mouse models. Both strains, although constructed differently, have identical and severe phenotypes, characterized by absent epidermis and hindlimbs and only rudimentary forelimbs at birth. Here we show that mice from one model, Brdm2, express normal levels of truncated p63 proteins that contain the DNA binding and oligomerization domain but lack the long carboxy-terminal SAM (sterile alpha-motif) and post-SAM domains that are specific for the alpha and beta isoforms. As such, transcriptionally active p63 proteins from Brdm2 mice resemble the naturally occurring p63 gamma isoforms, which of all the p63 isoforms most closely resemble p53. Thus, Brdm2 mice are p63 alpha/beta isoform-specific knockout mice, gaining unexpected new importance. Our studies identify that p63 alpha/beta but not p63 gamma are absolutely required for proper skin and limb development. Cell Death and Differentiation (2009) 16, 1108-1117; doi:10.1038/cdd.2009.25; published online 20 March 2009
Issue Date
2009
Status
published
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Journal
Cell Death and Differentiation 
ISSN
1350-9047

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