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      Essential and redundant functions of caudal family proteins in activating adult intestinal genes.

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          Abstract

          Transcription factors that potently induce cell fate often remain expressed in the induced organ throughout life, but their requirements in adults are uncertain and varied. Mechanistically, it is unclear if they activate only tissue-specific genes or also directly repress heterologous genes. We conditionally inactivated mouse Cdx2, a dominant regulator of intestinal development, and mapped its genome occupancy in adult intestinal villi. Although homeotic transformation, observed in Cdx2-null embryos, was absent in mutant adults, gene expression and cell morphology were vitally compromised. Lethality was significantly accelerated in mice lacking both Cdx2 and its homolog Cdx1, with particular exaggeration of defects in villus enterocyte differentiation. Importantly, Cdx2 occupancy correlated with hundreds of transcripts that fell but not with equal numbers that rose with Cdx loss, indicating a predominantly activating role at intestinal cis-regulatory regions. Integrated consideration of a transcription factor's mutant phenotype and cistrome hence reveals the continued and distinct requirement in adults of a critical developmental regulator that activates tissue-specific genes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Mol Cell Biol
          Molecular and cellular biology
          American Society for Microbiology
          1098-5549
          0270-7306
          May 2011
          : 31
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
          Article
          MCB.01250-10
          10.1128/MCB.01250-10
          3133364
          21402776
          2a3c0da5-2541-4ce5-a8c9-f7ec9b2723eb
          History

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