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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2002, p. 7204-7216, Vol. 22, No. 20
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.20.7204-7216.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Genetics,1 Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38105,3 Institute of Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia 309122
Received 6 February 2002/ Returned for modification 19 June 2002/ Accepted 2 July 2002
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-actin, MYOD, MYF5, myogenin, myosin heavy chain, desmin, myoglobin, and Z-band proteins (32). ERMS is prevalent in infants and young children, and the more aggressive ARMS occurs in children and adolescents (36). The latter has a poorer prognosis, and depending on the disease state at diagnosis, survival rates vary between 20 and 50% (1, 34). ARMS is found predominantly in the extremities and trunk (39) and is typified by the above-mentioned karyotypic hallmarks, which create the PAX3-FKHR (4, 23, 44) and PAX7-FKHR (16) fusion genes, respectively. Both proteins encoded by these genes contain the paired and homeobox DNA binding domains of the PAX transcription factors, while their C-terminal transcription transactivation sequences have been replaced by the bisected DNA binding domain of FKHR and its strong transactivating sequences. Like PAX3 and PAX7, the fusion proteins can bind combined paired-homeodomain DNA binding sites, and in addition the fusion proteins bind homeodomain sites alone, a gain of function mediated by the FKHR transactivation domain (10). The fusion proteins are much stronger transcriptional transactivators than are PAX3 and PAX7 (5, 6).
Pax3 (26) is important in mammalian development, as exemplified by the phenotypic aberrations found in heterozygous and homozygous Splotch mice that carry inactivating mutations in Pax3 (7, 24, 48). This gene is expressed in the developing brain, the dorsal neural tube, and various neural crest-derived tissues, such as the developing outflow tract of the heart, dorsal root ganglia, Schwann cells, and melanocytes. Consistent with this expression pattern, heterozygous Splotch mice show pigment disturbances on the abdomen, feet, tail and head whereas homozygous fetuses display neural-tube closure defects, absence of dorsal root ganglia, truncus arteriosis, and absence of limb musculature. During development, the dorsal part of the developing early somite forms the dermomyotome, which then develops into two structures: the outer dermomyotome cell layer and the inner myotome layer. Whereas most body muscles develop from the myotomes (17, 18), the lateral dermomyotome, to which Pax3 expression becomes restricted, gives rise to the hypaxial muscles including those of the limbs, the diaphragm (7, 24, 48), and the tongue (14, 37). Consequently, and due to the inability of Pax3-null cells to migrate out of the dermomyotome (7, 15, 24, 48), Splotch homozygous mice fail to develop limb and diaphragm musculature (46), while the development of other hypaxial muscles is affected (7, 9, 24, 45). Despite considerable overlap in expression between Pax3 and Pax7 during somitic development (26, 31), Pax7 is essential for the specification of myogenic satellite cells (43), which give rise to the majority of nuclei within adult skeletal muscle (43). When fused to FKHR, both genes ensure the expression of the fusion protein in early myogenic cells, the likely precursors of ARMS.
Also, the Fkhr gene is highly expressed in developing and adult mouse muscle (22), but a specific role in muscle cell growth or differentiation has not been described.
PAX3-FKHR transforms both chicken and mouse fibroblasts in culture (27, 42) but its tumorigenic capacity in vivo is unknown. Expression of PAX3-FKHR in transgenic mice under the control of Pax3 regulatory sequences showed a dominant negative effect on normal Pax3 function, resulting in a phenotype partly resembling that of Splotch mice (3). However, the mice were not tumor prone, suggesting that expression of PAX3-FKHR alone is not sufficient to cause rhabdomyosarcoma. We used a knock-in approach to create a mouse model for alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. We reasoned that expression of Pax3-FKHR under control of the endogenous Pax3 locus would mimic the situation in ARMS most faithfully. We report here that Pax3-FKHR chimeric mice and their heterozygous offspring do not develop muscle tumors. Pax3-FKHR heterozygous mice die around the time of birth as a result of respiratory and heart failure. These animals show numerous developmental abnormalities that could be explained by a dominant negative effect of Pax3-FKHR on Pax3 function.
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FIG.1. (A) Generation of the Pax3-FKHR knock-in allele by homologous recombination in ES cells. The top bar represents a physical map of the mouse Pax3 gene encompassing the area around exons 6 and 7 (gray boxes). The middle bar shows the targeting construct in which exon 7 of Pax3 is fused to exon 2 of FKHR (coarsely hatched box) and is followed by a Neor gene (finely hatched box) in the opposite transcriptional orientation. A TK selectable marker (black box) is present at the 5' end. The bottom line represents the targeted Pax3-FKHR allele. Underneath the targeted allele, the positions of the external 5' and 3' probes for Southern blot hybridization are indicated. Horizontal arrowheads indicate the positions of primers, used for genotyping and RT-PCR (Table 1). P, PstI; S, SstI; A, ApaI; B, BamHI; X, XhoI. (B) Southern blot with the 5' probe, showing wild-type (wt) and targeted Pax3-FKHR (+/-) alleles in a wild-type embryo and a Pax3-FKHR heterozygous littermate, respectively. (C) Southern blot with the 3' probe showing wild-type (wt) and targeted Pax3-FKHR (+/-) alleles. (D) Middle (upper left) and highly chimeric (lower left and right) Pax3-FKHR chimeric mice, showing white spots on the head, belly, and back.
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Breeding chimeras. Pax3-FKHR chimeric males were bred with C57BL/6 or NMRI females. Noon on the day of plug is E0.5.
Southern blot analyses. Mouse genomic DNA was digested with PstI (Fig. 1A), fractionated on a 0.8% agarose gel, transferred to a Hybond nylon membrane (Amersham Life Science), and hybridized with 5' and 3' Pax3 genomic probes located outside the targeting construct (Fig. 1A).
PCR analyses. To genotype offspring of the Pax3-FKHR chimeric mice, we used DNA from whole embryos, extraembryonal tissues, or tail snips. For direct PCR analysis, the tissues were lysed in 25 to 150 µl of proteinase K buffer, as previously described (47a). The PCR cocktail contained 2 µl of embryo lysate, 2 µl PCR buffer (Qiagen Inc.), 0.2 mM each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Inc.), 0.5 µM each primers 2 and 7 (Table 1) and 0.025 U of HotStart Taq DNA polymerase (Qiagen Inc.) per ml in a total volume of 20 µl. Samples were incubated for 15 min at 95°C for activation of the Taq DNA polymerase and then amplified for 30 to 40 cycles (94°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s). When necessary, nested PCR was performed under the same conditions. For the nested PCR, 2 µl of the undiluted PCR product or a 1:1,000 dilution (reverse transcriptase PCR [RT-PCR] of embryoid bodies) of the first PCR product was used with primers 3 and 6 (Table 1). PCR products were resolved by electrophoresis through 2% agarose gels. First and second nested rounds of PCR produced 677- and 563-bp Pax3-FKHR fragments, respectively.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotides used for PCR amplification of Pax3 and Pax3-FKHR sequences
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Histology and immunohistochemistry. Embryos and newborn mice were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline PBS for 12 to 48 h. Incisions on the back and abdomen of newborn mice were made prior to fixation. After fixation, the animals either were placed in 30% sucrose in PBS (for cryosections) for 24 to 48 h and then frozen in tissue-freezing medium (Triangle Biomedical Sciences) or were dehydrated and embedded in paraffin wax. Cryosections (10 µm) or paraffin sections (8 µm) of these specimens were placed on glass slides. After deparaffinizing sections in xylene and rehydrating them in PBS or removing the tissue-freezing medium from cryosections by washing in PBS, we stained them with hematoxylin-eosin or processed them for immunohistochemistry. Prior to immunohistochemical staining antigen retrieval was performed by heating the paraffin sections twice for 5 min each in 1.8 mM citric acid-8.2 mM sodium citrate (pH 6.0) in a microwave oven. Prior to incubations with antibodies, the cryosections were preblocked using an avidin-biotin blocking kit (Vector Laboratories, Inc). Whole-mount immunohistochemistry of mouse embryos was performed with a Pax3 antibody (see below), as described previously (19). Polyclonal anti-Pax3 antibodies were prepared as described previously (33) and diluted 1:500 prior to use. Specific antibody binding was detected using biotin-SP-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc.). MF20 anti-myosin heavy-chain antibody was obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, diluted 1:100 prior to use, and labeled with biotin using the InnoGenex labeling reagent. Biotin was detected with the Vestastain ABC-kit (Vector Laboratories, Inc). Slides were developed with Stable DAB (Research Genetics) or VIP substrate kits (Vector Laboratories, Inc).
In situ hybridization. Whole-mount E8.5 to E12.5 embryos were hybridized with digoxigenin-labeled Pax3 (bp 1224 to 1420) and FKHR (bp 2056 to 2656) cRNA probes. The hybridized probe was visualized using alkaline phosphatase-coupled anti-digoxigenin antibody and nitroblue tetrazolium-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate substrate (Boehrenger Mannheim) as described previously (38).
BrdU incorporation. Pregnant mice were injected with 200 µl of a 15-mg/ml solution of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) (Roche) in 0.9% saline-0.007 N NaOH. The animals were sacrificed 1 h after injection and processed for cryosectioning as described above. Sections were stained with anti-BrdU antibody (Becton Dickinson) as specified by the manufacturer. BrdU antibody was detected with Vestastain ABC-kit (Vector laboratories, Inc.).
ISEL staining. Apoptotic cells were detected on paraffin-embedded tissues or tissue cryosections using the Klenow-FragEL DNA fragmentation detection kit (Oncogene Research Products) as specified by the manufacturer.
Formation and myogenic differentiation of embryoid bodies. Prior to the formation of embryoid bodies, ES cell cultures (2.5 x 106) were purged from mouse embryo fibroblasts feeders by preplating the cells for 1 h on gelatinized tissue culture plastic and then plating them onto 6-cm gelatinized petri dishes. After 3 days of culture in the presence of leukemia-inhibiting factor, the cells were transferred to 10-cm-diameter bacterial dishes and further incubated in 15 ml of ES cell medium without leukemia-inhibiting factor under gentle shaking. Every day, 1 ml of medium containing developing embryoid bodies was collected. After an additional 4 days of culture on non-tissue culture plastic, embryoid bodies were transferred to gelatin-coated 24-well plates (1 ml per well) and differentiated in the presence or absence of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) (2.5 ng/ml) for 1 to 5 days.
Interventricular septum measurements. The widths of interventricular septa were measured on serial sections of two wild-type pups, two live-born mutant pups, and two still-born mutant pups. The average width was calculated by adding the widths of each individual section of two animals and dividing by the number of sections. The standard deviation was calculated using Microsoft Excel.
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Pax3-FKHR heterozygous mice die around the time of birth. Of all the chimeric Pax3-FKHR mice (>50 animals), we generated, only those derived from ES cell clones 4 and 28 gave germ line transmission, as judged by the agouti coat color of the offspring. However, none of over 150 genotyped 14-day-old agouti offspring (P14) were positive for the knock-in allele, indicating that the presence of Pax3-FKHR was not compatible with postnatal life. Genotyping of embryos of timed pregnancies showed that pups heterozygous for the fusion gene (Fig. 1B and C) died perinatally.
Most of the Pax3-FKHR heterozygous embryos had a near-normal appearance. However, 10% of them (20 of 200) exhibited deformations of the central nervous system such as exencephaly, spina bifida, and overgrowth of some parts of the caudal neural tube, data that are reported elsewhere.
Analysis of Pax3-FKHR expression during early embryogenesis. By using whole-mount immunostaining with our Pax3 antibody, we determined that the pattern of expression of Pax3 in E8.5-12.5 knock-in heterozygous embryos was the same as in wild-type littermates (Fig. 2A). Simultaneous whole- mount in situ hybridization of age-matched Pax3-FKHR embryos with a FKHR probe showed no coincidence between the FKHR and Pax3 signals in the neural tube and dermomyotome (data not shown), suggesting that the Pax3-FKHR allele was poorly expressed.
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FIG.2. Pax3-FKHR expression in embryos during early gestation and midgestation and in differentiating embryoid bodies. (A) Whole-mount immunostaining of E10.5 wild-type and Pax3-FKHR littermate embryos, using an affinity-purified Pax3 antibody. (B) RT-PCR of heart RNA from E14.5 embryos; even lanes, wild-type RNA; odd lanes, mutant RNA; lanes 1 and 2, first-round RT-PCR for Pax3; lanes 3 and 4, RT-PCR for Pax3-FKHR; lanes 5 and 6, seminested PCR for Pax3-FKHR. (C) RT-PCR of whole RNA from E10.5 embryos. Lanes: 1 and 2, first-round RT-PCR for Pax3 with RNA of wild-type and Pax3-FKHR+/- embryos; 3 and 4, first-round RT-PCR for Pax3-FKHR with RNA of wild-type and Pax3-FKHR+/- embryos; 5 and 6, seminested RT-PCR for Pax3-FKHR with RNA of wild-type and Pax3-FKHR+/- embryos; m, 1-kb marker. (D) RT-PCR of RNA from dissected body parts of E10.5 embryos. Lanes: 1 to 8 first round of RT-PCR for Pax3 with RNA of wild-type (lanes 1 to 4) and Pax3-FKHR+/- (lanes 5 to 8) embryos; 9 to 16 seminested RT-PCR for Pax3-FKHR with RNA of wild-type (lanes 9 to 12) and Pax3-FKHR+/- (lanes 13 to 16) embryos; 1, 5, 9, and 13, neural tubes; 2, 6, 10, and 14 somites and limb buds; 3, 7, 11, and 15, pharyngeal arches; 4, 8, 12, 16, remaining parts of embryos; m, 1-kb marker. Primers: for Pax3, 1 and 4; for first-round Pax3-FKHR RT-PCR, 1 and 7; for seminested Pax3-FKHR PCR, 1 and 6 (Fig. 1A; Table 1). (E) RT-PCR of differentiating embryoid bodies. Lanes: 1d to 4d, RT-PCR of embryoid bodies, grown in suspension for 1 to 4 days; 4d+1 to 4d+5, RT-PCR of embryoid bodies differentiating for 1 to 5 days after growth in suspension, in the presence (+bFGF) or absence (-bFGF) of bFGF; top gel, ß-actin gene; second gel from top, Pax3; third gel from top, Pax3-FKHR first-round PCR; bottom gel, Pax3-FKHR second-round PCR. Primers (Fig. 1; Table 1): ß-actin gene, 9 and 10; Pax3, 4 and 8; first Pax3-FKHR PCR, 7 and 8; seminested Pax3-FKHR PCR, 6 and 8.
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Phenotype of Pax3-FKHR heterozygous embryos. Crosses of Pax3-FKHR chimeras with C57BL/6 (clone 4) and NMRI (clone 28) females produced only 10 born Pax3-FKHR heterozygous pups (5 for ES clone 4 and 5 for ES clone 28), of which 7 (4 for ES clone 4 and 3 for ES clone 28) were dead at the time of observation, a few hours after birth. Histological analysis of three of these newborns (two for ES clone 4 and one for ES clone 28) showed that in contrast to wild-type littermates (Fig. 3A), their lung alveoli had a compact homogeneous appearance, indicating that the lungs had not inflated (Fig. 3B). Histological analysis of serial transverse sections of the thorax region of these heterozygous Pax3-FKHR embryos showed that the interventricular septum of the heart was abnormal, sometimes thicker (Fig. 3E, 666 ± 50 µm) but also sometimes thinner (see below) (Fig. 3F, 283 ± 54 µm) than that of wild-type littermates (Fig. 3D, 467 ± 79 µm). There were interventricular septum defects (VSDs) in the wall overlying the muscular part of the interventricular septum (Fig. 3H). In addition, the caval veins of the mutant hearts appeared overextended (compare Fig. 3J and K), indicating congestive heart failure.
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FIG.3. Hematoxylin-eosin staining of transverse sections of the thorax region of a P1 wild-type mouse (A, D, G, J, and M) and two Pax3-FKHR heterozygous mice (one dead at birth, [B, E, H, K, and N] and one alive [C, F, I, L, and O]). (A to C) Lungs. Lungs of a wild-type newborn (A), of a dead Pax3-FKHR newborn with noninflated lungs (B) and of a live Pax3-FKHR newborn with inflated lungs (C). (D to F) Heart. Interventricular septa and trabeculated ventricle walls of two mutant hearts appear aberrant (thicker [E] or thinner [F]) compared to those of a wild-type heart (D); the mutant heart (F) also has an abnormally large opening of the tricuspid valve (arrow). (G to I) Interventricular septum. VSD are evident in the hearts of the Pax3-FKHR knock-in mutants (arrows in panels H and I). (J to L) Rostral sections of the heart. The right and left pulmonary arteries are both open and attached to the correct lung; the thymus in mutants has an abnormal, more caudal location (asterisks in panels K and L); and the caval vein is overextended, indicating heart failure (compare VC in panels J and K). (M to O) Liver. The livers of Pax3-FKHR knock-in heterozygous embryos are engorged with blood (N and O), suggestive of heart failure. Abbreviations: rV, right ventricle; lV, left ventricle; S, septum; rP, right pulmonary trunk; lP, left pulmonary trunk; dA, decending aorta; O, esophagus.
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In contrast to Splotch homozygous mice, which have persistent truncus arteriosus (20), the outflow tract of the heart appeared to be normal in all heterozygous knock-in Pax3-FKHR mutants examined. The right and left pulmonary arteries were both open and attached to the correct lung (Fig. 3J to L, rP and lP). Nonetheless, their livers were engorged with blood (compare Fig. 3N and O with M), which is suggestive of heart failure. The Pax3-FKHR mutants also had an abnormal, more caudal location of the left and right lobes of the thymus (Fig. 3K and L).
Examination of the embryos at earlier stages of development showed that the heart phenotype in Pax3-FKHR heterozygous embryos first became apparent at E16.5. Serial transverse sections through the heart of E16.5 Pax3-FKHR and wild-type embryos revealed that the muscular component of the interventricular septum was already abnormally thickened (Fig. 4A and B), while the trabeculated walls of the left and right ventricular chambers of the heart appeared normal (Fig. 4A and B). Another difference from wild-type littermates was that the lumen of the pulmonary trunk portion of the outflow tract was already dilated (compare numbers in Fig. 4C and D).
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FIG. 4. Anatomy of interventricular septum and outflow tract of the hearts of E16.5 wild-type and Pax3-FKHR heterozygous embryos and Pax3 expression. (A to D) Hematoxylin and eosin staining of transverse sections of wild-type (A and C) and mutant (B and D) hearts. The muscular component of the interventricular septum of the heterozygous mutant is already abnormally thickened (asterisk in panel B); the outflow tract of the heart of the Pax3-FKHR mouse is appropriately divided, but the lumen of the pulmonary trunk portion of the outflow tract is dilated (compare panels C and D). (E) Pax3 plus Pax3-FKHR expression in the heart of an E16.5 Pax3-FKHR embryo. (F) Higher magnification of the boxed region of panel E. Green, nuclear staining with methylene green; purple, staining with -myosin heavy chain; brown, staining with anti-Pax3.
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FIG. 5. Muscles of the diaphragm and tongue of Pax3-FKHR heterozygous pups are abnormal around the time of birth but not at E13.5. (A to D) Hematoxylin and eosin staining of similar transverse sections of P1 wild-type (A and B) and Pax3-FKHR knock-in (C and D) diaphragms showing a much reduced musculature of the mutant diaphragm. (E) Sagittal section of a P1 Pax3-FKHR diaphragm showing gaps (asterisk). (F and G) BrdU incorporation and Pax3 and Pax3-FKHR expression in diaphragms of E13.5 wild-type (F) and Pax3-FKHR knock-in (G) pups. Green, nuclear staining with methylene green; purple, staining with anti-BrdU; brown, staining with anti-Pax3. (H to K) Hematoxylin and eosin staining of similar sagittal sections of the tongue of P1 wild-type (H and I) and Pax3-FKHR mutant (J and K) pups. Abbreviations: d, diaphragm; Li, liver; Lu, lung.
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Taken together, the likely cause of perinatal death of the knock-in pups was congestive heart failure resulting from a combination of the VSD, tricuspid valve insufficiency, and diaphragm defects.
Expression of Pax3 and Pax3-FKHR in the heart. To correlate Pax3 and Pax3-FKHR expression with the heart phenotype of mutant embryos, serial transverse sections of E16.5 (Fig. 4E and F) and E13.5 (data not shown) hearts were stained with Pax3 antibodies. This detected a small number of Pax3-positive cells in the mitral and tricuspid valve region of the membranous component of the interventricular septum in both wild-type and Pax3-FKHR heterozygous hearts. This, together with the described heart phenotype, led us to examine the expression of the Pax3-FKHR allele in the heart at midgestation. RT-PCR analysis of RNA from hearts of E14.5 wild-type and Pax3-FKHR heterozygous mice using Pax3 and FKHR primers of similar efficiency (data not shown) detected expression of Pax3 (Fig. 2B, lanes 1 and 2) but not of Pax3-FKHR (lanes 3 and 4) after the first round of PCR amplification. A subsequent round of seminested PCR revealed the presence of the Pax3-FKHR product in the heart of the knock-in but not of the wild-type mice (Fig. 2B, lanes 5 and 6), as confirmed by DNA sequence analysis of the bands. Thus, the Pax3-FKHR knock-in allele was expressed in the heart, albeit at a lower level than the normal Pax3 allele.
In vitro differentiation of Pax3-FKHR knock-in ES cells. To determine whether the expression of the targeted Pax3-FKHR allele was intrinsically repressed, we generated aggregation embryoid bodies with our Pax3-FKHR ES cell lines (41). After being plated onto gelatin-coated plastic in the presence or absence of bFGF, the embryoid bodies differentiated spontaneously and generated different cell lineages (including myogenic cells) (41), in which we detected the expression of both Pax3 and Pax3-FKHR (Fig. 2E). Again, based on the observation that the Pax3 and FKHR primers were equally efficient in PCR (results not shown), we estimated that at the beginning of differentiation, the amount of Pax3-FKHR PCR product was two- to threefold smaller than that of Pax3 product but at day 4 the amounts were almost equal. This suggested that expression of the Pax3-FKHR allele is overall lower but not intrinsically compromised by the FKHR and/or Neor sequences.
Interestingly, the amount of Pax3-FKHR RT-PCR product diminished on day 5 of differentiation, indicating a possible delayed loss of Pax3-FKHR-expressing cells.
Absence of tumors in Pax3-FKHR chimeric mice and heterozygous pups. None of the Pax3-FKHR chimeric mice (>50 mice) developed muscle tumors during the 1.5 years that they were maintained. Also, the heterozygous pups that were born showed no signs of tumorigenic growth. In view of the fact that the Pax3-FKHR allele is poorly expressed, this is not a surprising result. Therefore, a conditional knock-in allele would be a better approach to assess the tumorigenicity of Pax3-FKHR in vivo.
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One of the reasons for the low expression of the fusion gene could be the presence of the Pgk-Neor cassette, which has been shown to sometimes attenuate the expression of the targeted gene (28). Our in vitro differentiation experiments with the Pax3-FKHR knock-in ES cells showed that expression of the allele was two- to threefold lower than that of the wild-type allele at the beginning of differentiation and almost equal on day 4 of differentiation. This result suggested that in the in utero developing embryo, selection might take place against Pax3-FKHR expression. This could occur through apoptosis of cells that start expressing Pax3-FKHR or, alternatively, by silencing of the fusion allele, through hypermethylation, implying that its regulation in the developing embryo is different from that in differentiating embryoid bodies in vitro. Differences in methylation at identical loci between different ES cell clones and tetraploid embryos derived from these clones have been reported (29). This shows that epigenetic modifications such as the methylation status of a gene are unstable in ES cells and could therefore explain the observed discrepancy in the level of Pax3-FKHR expression in our heterozygous embryos and ES cells. Although we did not study the methylation status of the fusion locus in embryos and ES cells, we prefer this explanation over that of massive apoptosis of Pax3-FKHR-expressing cells in the early embryo. This is based on the observation that ISEL staining of transverse serial sections of entire E9 wild-type and Pax3-FKHR embryos (data not shown) failed to show elevated levels of apoptotic cells in the dermomyotomes and dorsal neural tube of the mutants (both expressing high levels of Pax3). Obviously the suppression of Pax3-FKHR is not complete and varies among tissues, with the highest expression being found in the developing heart, somewhat lower expression being found in the neural tube, and low expression being found in the dermomyotome, limb buds, and branchial arches.
Forced expression of Pax3-FKHR in primary myoblasts cultured in vitro leads to massive apoptosis on induction of differentiation of these cells (I. Lagutina and A. Hollenbach, unpublished results). Increased apoptosis was also detected in PAX3-FKHR-expressing rhabdomyosarcomas (12). Our analysis of the diaphragm and tongue from E13.5 Pax3-FKHR mice showed that the size and cellularity of these structures were similar to those of wild-type littermates, and we could not find evidence for increased apoptosis of Pax3-FKHR cells at this developmental stage. Our in vitro culture experiments of primary myoblasts showed that cells expressing Pax3-FKHR grow faster than normal myoblasts (A. Hollenbach and I. Lagutina, unpublished results), a Pax3-FKHR effect also reported for rhabdomyosarcomas and cell lines (2, 12). It is therefore unlikely that the diminished musculature of the tongue and diaphragm of newborn Pax3-FKHR mice is caused by reduced growth of the muscle precursors. We propose that gradual apoptosis during later stages of muscle differentiation might cause the poor development of the diaphragm and tongue musculature, although we have no direct experimental support for this explanation.
Expression of the Pax3-FKHR allele during the first 4 days of differentiation of knock-in ES cells was comparable to that of the wild-type Pax3 allele (Fig. 2E), and that of Pax3-FKHR but not Pax3 mRNA appeared to diminish on day 5 of differentiation. This indicated a possible loss of Pax3-FKHR-expressing cells. This result would be in agreement with our explanation above, in which differentiating Pax3-FKHR myogenic cells in embryos undergo apoptosis.
It is noteworthy that the musculature of the limbs was not similarly affected. An explanation might be that in our mice the differentiating myoblasts in the developing limb are less sensitive to the effect of Pax3-FKHR than are those in the tongue and diaphragm. Alternatively, the muscles of the tongue and diaphragm might express more Pax3-FKHR during development than to those of the limbs.
Our data obtained with primary myoblasts do not support a direct transcriptional regulation of Pax3 by Pax3-FKHR (unpublished results). Therefore it is likely that inhibition of Pax3 function is mediated by altered regulation of downstream targets as suggested by cDNA array analysis of NIH 3T3 cells (32). These genes may include Six1, Eya2, and Mox1 (40), which are involved in the early steps of skeletal muscle differentiation.
Cardiac failure of Pax3-FKHR heterozygous mice. The presence of a single copy of the Pax3-FKHR fusion gene caused perinatal death. In all cases, mutant animals exhibited signs of cardiac failure exemplified by a blood-engorged liver (compare Fig. 3N and O with Fig. 3M) and/or overextension of the caval veins (Fig. 3J and K), and all mutants exhibited VSDs. However, differences in the time of death between mutants correlated with the severity of diaphragm defects: mutants dying just before or during birth showed gaps in the diaphragm musculature (Fig. 5C), whereas those that survived for several hours did not. We infer that these gaps further impair the function of the diaphragm, thereby disabling the creation of negative pressure within the pleural cavity and preventing inflation of the lungs (Fig. 3B).
Small VSDs are unlikely to be the direct cause of death: human patients with small VSDs have an excellent prognosis, and in many cases these defects close spontaneously during the first 2 years of life (35). An abnormally large opening of the tricuspid valve in these mutants (Fig. 3F) indicated tricuspid valve insufficiency, which alone usually does not result in perinatal death. However, the combination of these defects (Fig. 3A and B) and the underdeveloped diaphragm may well cause respiratory and cardiac failure and subsequent death.
Origin of Pax3-expressing cells in the embryonal heart. Pax3 is expressed during midgestation in the dorsal part of the neural tube, which gives rise to migrating neural crest cells. A specific neural crest cell population, termed the cardiac neural crest, is responsible for morphogenesis of the outflow region of the developing heart, and absence of Pax3 results in severe outflow tract defects (13). Experiments using labeled cells derived from cardiac neural crest revealed that these cells are absent in the atrioventricular canal and in the mature mitral and tricuspid valves (30). In our study we observed a small number of Pax3- and Pax3-FKHR-expressing cells in the valve region of the membranous component of the interventricular septa of E13.5 and E16.5 hearts and in the mitral and tricuspid valves of E16.5 embryos (Fig. 4). Although we do not know whether these cells have a neural crest origin, we speculate that Pax3-FKHR expression in these cells negatively affects valve function and might directly contribute to the abnormally large opening of the tricuspid valve in these mutants.
Differences and similarities between knock-in and transgenic Pax3-FKHR mice. In the transgenic-mouse study by Anderson et al. (3), amplified Pax3 enhancer/promoter driven Pax3-FKHR transgenes did escape silencing. This may occur because not all Pax3 regulatory sequences were present in the transgenic construct, because of the absence of a Neor selectable marker, or because of integration of the transgenes into ectopic chromosomal sites. A different regulation of the Pax3-FKHR transgenes is further suggested by the observation that the transgenic lines were viable and therefore did not suffer from the respiratory failure described here. This suggests that Pax3-expressing cells contributing to the heart and diaphragm were not affected or were much less affected than in our knock-in animals.
Due to the low level of expression of the PAX3-FKHR knock-in allele, we cannot conclude whether expression of PAX3-FKHR alone is sufficient to cause rhabdomyosarcoma. However, given the fact that the transgenic model of Anderson et al. (3) also fails to develop rhabdomyosarcomas, it suggests that PAX3-FKHR expression alone might be insufficient to cause tumors.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants HL60714 and HL60104 to S.J.C. and CA71907 to G.C.G, Cancer Center (CORE) support grant CA-21765, and the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities (ALSAC) of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
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