AI Article Synopsis

  • Mosaic mutant analysis helps identify gene functions by studying cellular defects in mutant cells within a normal environment, especially in invertebrates.
  • MASTR (mosaic mutant analysis with spatial and temporal control of recombination) is a new technique for mice that combines gene mutagenesis with cell marking using a targeted allele, R26(MASTR), allowing for precise tracking of mutant cells.
  • Studies using MASTR in the developing hindbrain reveal critical time windows for neural progenitor viability and quick differentiation of granule cell precursors when specific signaling pathways (FGF8 and SHH) are disrupted.

Article Abstract

Mosaic mutant analysis, the study of cellular defects in scattered mutant cells in a wild-type environment, is a powerful approach for identifying critical functions of genes and has been applied extensively to invertebrate model organisms. A highly versatile technique has been developed in mouse: MASTR (mosaic mutant analysis with spatial and temporal control of recombination), which utilizes the increasing number of floxed alleles and simultaneously combines conditional gene mutagenesis and cell marking for fate analysis. A targeted allele (R26(MASTR)) was engineered; the allele expresses a GFPcre fusion protein following FLP-mediated recombination, which serves the dual function of deleting floxed alleles and marking mutant cells with GFP. Within 24 hr of tamoxifen administration to R26(MASTR) mice carrying an inducible FlpoER transgene and a floxed allele, nearly all GFP-expressing cells have a mutant allele. The fate of single cells lacking FGF8 or SHH signaling in the developing hindbrain was analyzed using MASTR, and it was revealed that there is only a short time window when neural progenitors require FGFR1 for viability and that granule cell precursors differentiate rapidly when SMO is lost. MASTR is a powerful tool that provides cell-type-specific (spatial) and temporal marking of mosaic mutant cells and is broadly applicable to developmental, cancer, and adult stem cell studies.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3460375PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2012.07.004DOI Listing

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