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Hox11 expression characterizes developing zeugopod synovial joints and is coupled to postnatal articular cartilage morphogenesis into functional zones in mice.

Authors :
Rux, Danielle
Helbig, Kimberly
Koyama, Eiki
Pacifici, Maurizio
Source :
Developmental Biology. Sep2021, Vol. 477, p49-63. 15p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Previous studies on mouse embryo limbs have established that interzone mesenchymal progenitor cells emerging at each prescribed joint site give rise to joint tissues over fetal time. These incipient tissues undergo structural maturation and morphogenesis postnatally, but underlying mechanisms of regulation remain unknown. Hox11 genes dictate overall zeugopod musculoskeletal patterning and skeletal element identities during development. Here we asked where these master regulators are expressed in developing limb joints and whether they are maintained during postnatal zeugopod joint morphogenesis. We found that Hoxa11 was predominantly expressed and restricted to incipient wrist and ankle joints in E13.5 mouse embryos, and became apparent in medial and central regions of knees by E14.5, though remaining continuously dormant in elbow joints. Closer examination revealed that Hoxa11 initially characterized interzone and neighboring cells and was then restricted to nascent articular cartilage, intra joint ligaments and structures such as meniscal horns over prenatal time. Postnatally, articular cartilage progresses from a nondescript cell-rich, matrix-poor tissue to a highly structured, thick, zonal and mechanically competent tissue with chondrocyte columns over time, most evident at sites such as the tibial plateau. Indeed, Hox11 expression (primarily Hoxa11) was intimately coupled to such morphogenetic processes and, in particular, to the topographical rearrangement of chondrocytes into columns within the intermediate and deep zones of tibial plateau that normally endures maximal mechanical loads. Revealingly, these expression patterns were maintained even at 6 months of age. In sum, our data indicate that Hox11 genes remain engaged well beyond embryonic synovial joint patterning and are specifically tied to postnatal articular cartilage morphogenesis into a zonal and resilient tissue. The data demonstrate that Hox11 genes characterize adult, terminally differentiated, articular chondrocytes and maintain region-specificity established in the embryo. [Display omitted] • Hox11 is expressed in articular chondrocytes throughout development and adulthood. • Hox11 is restricted to joints in the zeugopod region (except the elbow). • Hox11 is excluded from chondrocytes beneath the tidemark in adult articular cartilage. • Hox11 paralogs exhibit divergent expression patterns through joint development. • Hoxa11 is the dominant Hox11 paralog in zeugopod synovial joints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121606
Volume :
477
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Developmental Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151307475
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2021.05.007