<i>Fgf-10</i> is required for both limb and lung development and exhibits striking functional similarity to <i>Drosophila branchless</i>

Hosung Min(Amgen (United States)), Dimitry M. Danilenko(Amgen (United States)), Sheila Scully(Amgen (United States)), Brad Bolon(Amgen (United States)), Brian D. Ring(Amgen (United States)), J E Tarpley(Amgen (United States)), M Rose(Amgen (United States)), W. Scott Simonet(Amgen (United States))
Genes & Development
October 15, 1998
Cited by 884Open Access
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Abstract

Fgf-10-deficient mice (Fgf-10(-/-)) were generated to determine the role(s) of Fgf-10 in vertebrate development. Limb bud initiation was abolished in Fgf-10(-/-) mice. Strikingly, Fgf-10(-/-) fetuses continued to develop until birth, despite the complete absence of both fore- and hindlimbs. Fgf-10 is necessary for apical ectodermal ridge (AER) formation and acts epistatically upstream of Fgf-8, the earliest known AER marker in mice. Fgf-10(-/-) mice exhibited perinatal lethality associated with complete absence of lungs. Although tracheal development was normal, main-stem bronchial formation, as well as all subsequent pulmonary branching morphogenesis, was completely disrupted. The pulmonary phenotype of Fgf-10(-/-) mice is strikingly similar to that of the Drosophila mutant branchless, an Fgf homolog.


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