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Rnf2 (Ring1b) deficiency causes gastrulation arrest and cell cycle inhibition.

Jan Willem Voncken ,
Bernard A J Roelen ,
Mieke Roefs ,
Stijn de Vries ,
Els Verhoeven ,
Silvia Marino ,
Jacqueline Deschamps ,
Maarten van Lohuizen

Abstract

The highly homologous Rnf2 (Ring1b) and Ring1 (Ring1a) proteins were identified as in vivo interactors of the Polycomb Group (PcG) protein Bmi1. Functional ablation of Rnf2 results in gastrulation arrest, in contrast to relatively mild phenotypes in most other PcG gene null mutants belonging to the same functional group, among which is Ring1. Developmental defects occur in both embryonic and extraembryonic tissues during gastrulation. The early lethal phenotype is reminiscent of that of the PcG-gene knockouts Eed and Ezh2, which belong to a separate functional PcG group and PcG protein complex. This finding indicates that these biochemically distinct PcG complexes are both required during early mouse development. In contrast to the strong skeletal transformation in Ring1 hemizygous mice, hemizygocity for Rnf2 does not affect vertebral identity. However, it does aggravate the cerebellar phenotype in a Bmi1 null-mutant background. Together, these results suggest that Rnf2 or Ring1-containing PcG complexes have minimal functional redundancy in specific tissues, despite overlap in expression patterns. We show that the early developmental arrest in Rnf2-null embryos is partially bypassed by genetic inactivation of the Cdkn2a (Ink4aARF) locus. Importantly, this finding implicates Polycomb-mediated repression of the Cdkn2a locus in early murine development.

More about this publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume 100
Issue nr. 5
Pages 2468-73
Publication date 04-03-2003

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1073/pnas.0434312100
Europe PubMed Central 12589020
Pubmed 12589020

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