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      Connexin43 Deficiency Causes Delayed Ossification, Craniofacial Abnormalities, and Osteoblast Dysfunction

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          Abstract

          Connexin(Cx)43 is the major gap junction protein present in osteoblasts. We have shown that overexpression of Cx45 in osteoblasts expressing endogenous Cx43 leads to decreased cell–cell communication (Koval, M., S.T. Geist, E.M. Westphale, A.E. Kemendy, R. Civitelli, E.C. Beyer, and T.H. Steinberg. 1995. J. Cell Biol. 130:987–995) and transcriptional downregulation of several osteoblastic differentiation markers (Lecanda, F., D.A. Towler, K. Ziambaras, S.-L. Cheng, M. Koval, T.H. Steinberg, and R. Civitelli. 1998. Mol. Biol. Cell 9:2249–2258). Here, using the Cx43-null mouse model, we determined whether genetic deficiency of Cx43 affects skeletal development in vivo. Both intramembranous and endochondral ossification of the cranial vault were delayed in the mutant embryos, and cranial bones originating from migratory neural crest cells were also hypoplastic, leaving an open foramen at birth. Cx43-deficient animals also exhibited retarded ossification of the clavicles, ribs, vertebrae, and limbs, demonstrating that skeletal abnormalities are not restricted to a neural crest defect. However, the axial and appendicular skeleton of Cx43-null animals were essentially normal at birth. Cell to cell diffusion of calcein was poor among Cx43-deficient osteoblasts, whose differentiated phenotypic profile and mineralization potential were greatly impaired, compared with wild-type cells. Therefore, in addition to the reported neural crest cell defect, lack of Cx43 also causes a generalized osteoblast dysfunction, leading to delayed mineralization and skull abnormalities. Cell to cell signaling, mediated by Cx43 gap junctions, was critical for normal osteogenesis, craniofacial development, and osteoblastic function.

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          Most cited references41

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          Cardiac malformation in neonatal mice lacking connexin43.

          Gap junctions are made up of connexin proteins, which comprise a multigene family in mammals. Targeted mutagenesis of connexin43 (Cx43), one of the most prevalent connexin proteins, showed that its absence was compatible with survival of mouse embryos to term, even though mutant cell lines showed reduced dye coupling in vitro. However, mutant embryos died at birth, as a result of a failure in pulmonary gas exchange caused by a swelling and blockage of the right ventricular outflow tract from the heart. This finding suggests that Cx43 plays an essential role in heart development but that there is functional compensation among connexins in other parts of the developing fetus.
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            The triple origin of skull in higher vertebrates: a study in quail-chick chimeras.

            We have used the quail-chick chimera technique to study the origin of the bones of the skull in the avian embryo. Although the contribution of the neural crest to the facial and visceral skeleton had been established previously, the origin of the vault of the skull (i.e. frontal and parietal bones) remained uncertain. Moreover formation of the occipito-otic region from either the somitic or the cephalic paraxial mesoderm had not been experimentally investigated. The data obtained in the present and previous works now allow us to assign a precise embryonic origin from either the mesectoderm, the paraxial cephalic mesoderm or the five first somites, to all the bones forming the avian skull. We distinguish a skull located in front of the extreme tip of the notochord which reaches the sella turcica and a skull located caudally to this boundary. The former ('prechordal skull') is derived entirely from the neural crest, the latter from the mesoderm (cephalic or somitic) in its ventromedial part ('chordal skull') and from the crest for the parietal bone and for part of the otic region. An important point enlighten in this work concerns the double origin of the corpus of the sphenoid in which basipresphenoid is of neural crest origin and the basipostsphenoid is formed by the cephalic mesoderm. Formation of the occipito-otic region of the skeleton is particularly complex and involves the cooperation of the five first somites and the paraxial mesoderm at the hind-brain level. The morphogenetic movements leading to the initial puzzle assembly could be visualized in a reproducible way by means of small grafts of quail mesodermal areas into chick embryos. The data reported here are discussed in the evolutionary context of the 'New Head' hypothesis of Gans and Northcutt (1983, Science, 220, 268-274).
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              Differential staining of cartilage and bone in whole mouse fetuses by alcian blue and alizarin red S.

              M. McLeod (1980)
              The procedure described by Inouye ('76) for the staining of full-term mouse fetal skeletons has been adapted for use with mouse embryos and fetuses of days 14-18 of gestation. The main adaptations for younger specimens involve a longer time in acetone, in lieu of skinning, and omission of the aqueous KOH step. These adaptations require more time but result in consistently good staining of intact specimens.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Cell Biol
                The Journal of Cell Biology
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0021-9525
                1540-8140
                13 November 2000
                : 151
                : 4
                : 931-944
                Affiliations
                [a ]Divisions of Bone and Mineral and Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine
                [b ]Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, Washington University School of Medicine, Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
                Article
                0005156
                10.1083/jcb.151.4.931
                2169447
                11076975
                487468ec-183c-4876-bc94-3fa0d2e7805e
                © 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
                History
                : 30 May 2000
                : 6 September 2000
                : 25 September 2000
                Categories
                Original Article

                Cell biology
                osteoblast differentiation,connexin43,connexin45,gene knockout,skeletal development
                Cell biology
                osteoblast differentiation, connexin43, connexin45, gene knockout, skeletal development

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