The mechanisms of neural crest cell induction and specification are highly conserved among vertebrate model organisms, but how similar these mechanisms are in mammalian neural crest cell formation remains open to question. The zinc finger of the cerebellum 1 (ZIC1) transcription factor is considered a core component of the vertebrate gene regulatory network that specifies neural crest fate at the neural plate border. In mouse embryos, however, mutation does not cause neural crest defects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZinc finger of the cerebellum (Zic) proteins act as classic transcription factors to promote transcription of the Foxd3 gene during neural crest cell specification. Additionally, they can act as co-factors that bind proteins from the T-cell factor/lymphoid enhancing factor (TCF/LEF) family (TCFs) to repress WNT-β-catenin-dependent transcription without contacting DNA. Here, we show that ZIC activity at the neural plate border is influenced by WNT-dependent SUMOylation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ZIC proteins are a family of transcription regulators with a well-defined zinc finger DNA-binding domain and there is evidence that they elicit functional DNA binding at a ZIC DNA binding site. Little is known, however, regarding domains within ZIC proteins that confer trans-activation or -repression. To address this question, a new cell-based trans-activation assay system suitable for ZIC proteins in HEK293T cells was constructed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-qPCR), a powerful and efficient means of rapidly comparing gene expression between experimental conditions, is routinely used as a phenotyping tool in developmental biology. The accurate comparison of gene expression across multiple embryonic stages requires normalisation to reference genes that have stable expression across the time points to be examined. As the embryo and its constituent tissues undergo rapid growth and differentiation during development, reference genes known to be stable across some time points cannot be assumed to be stable across all developmental stages.
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