HIRA, a DiGeorge syndrome candidate gene, is required for cardiac outflow tract septation

MJ Farrell, H Stadt, KT Wallis, P Scambler… - Circulation …, 1999 - Am Heart Assoc
MJ Farrell, H Stadt, KT Wallis, P Scambler, RL Hixon, R Wolfe, L Leatherbury, ML Kirby
Circulation research, 1999Am Heart Assoc
DiGeorge syndrome (DGS) is a congenital disease characterized by defects in organs and
tissues that depend on contributions by cell populations derived from neural crest for proper
development. A number of candidate genes that lie within the q11 region of chromosome 22
commonly deleted in DGS patients have been identified. Orthologues of the DGS candidate
gene HIRA are expressed in the neural crest and in neural crest–derived tissues in both
chick and mouse embryos. By exposing a portion of the premigratory chick neural crest to …
Abstract
—DiGeorge syndrome (DGS) is a congenital disease characterized by defects in organs and tissues that depend on contributions by cell populations derived from neural crest for proper development. A number of candidate genes that lie within the q11 region of chromosome 22 commonly deleted in DGS patients have been identified. Orthologues of the DGS candidate gene HIRA are expressed in the neural crest and in neural crest–derived tissues in both chick and mouse embryos. By exposing a portion of the premigratory chick neural crest to phosphorothioate end–protected antisense oligonucleotides, ex ovo, followed by orthotopic backtransplantation to the untreated embryos, we have shown that the functional attenuation of cHIRA in the chick cardiac neural crest results in a significantly increased incidence of persistent truncus arteriosus, a phenotypic change characteristic of DGS, but does not affect the repatterning aortic arch arteries, the ventricular function, or the alignment of the outflow tract.
Am Heart Assoc