Back to Search Start Over

Disruption of a Hedgehog-Foxf1-Rspo2 Signaling Axis Leads to Tracheomalacia and a Loss of Sox9+ Tracheal Chondrocytes

Authors :
Stephen L. Trisno
Talia Nasr
Aaron M. Zorn
Keziah Daniels
Vladimir V. Kalinichenko
Praneet Chaturvedi
John M. Shannon
James M. Wells
Kunal Agarwal
Jessica L. Kinney
Vladimir Ustiyan
Debora Sinner
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Congenital tracheomalacia, resulting from incomplete tracheal cartilage development, is a relatively common birth defect that severely impairs breathing in neonates. Mutations in the Hedgehog (HH) pathway and downstream Gli transcription factors are associated with tracheomalacia in patients and mouse models; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. Using multipleHH/Glimouse mutants including one that mimics Pallister-Hall Syndrome, we show that excessive Gli repressor activity prevents specification of tracheal chondrocytes. Lineage tracing experiments show that Sox9+ chondrocytes arise from HH-responsive splanchnic mesoderm in the fetal foregut that expresses the transcription factor Foxf1. Disrupted HH/Gli signaling results in 1) loss of Foxf1 which in turn is required to support Sox9+ chondrocyte progenitors and 2) a dramatic reduction inRspo2, a secreted ligand that potentiates Wnt signaling known to be required for chondrogenesis. These results reveal a HH-Foxf1-Rspo2 signaling axis that governs tracheal cartilage development and informs the etiology of tracheomalacia.SUMMARY STATEMENTThis work provides a mechanistic basis for tracheomalacia in patients with Hedgehog pathway mutations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........35ffa2175c500e914ca9b94c9e99df81
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.07.11.198556