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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2000, p. 1055-1062, Vol. 20, No. 3
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Peri-Implantation Lethality in Mice Lacking the Sm Motif-Containing Protein Lsm4

Emilio Hirsch,1,dagger Toshitaka Oohashi,1 Marianne Ahmad,2 Stefan Stamm,3 and Reinhard Fässler1,2,*

Max Planck Institut für Biochemie1 and Max Planck Institut für Neurobiologie,3 82152 Martinsried, Germany, and Department of Experimental Pathology, Lund University, 221 85 Lund, Sweden2

Received 1 October 1999/Accepted 13 October 1999

Small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) are particles present only in eukaryotic cells. They are involved in a large variety of RNA maturation processes, most notably in pre-mRNA splicing. Several of the proteins typically found in snRNPs contain a sequence signature, the Sm domain, conserved from yeast to mammals. By using a promoter trap strategy to target actively transcribed loci in murine embryonic stem cells, a new murine gene encoding an Sm motif-containing protein was identified. Database searches revealed that it is the mouse orthologue of Lsm4p, a protein found in yeast and human cells and putatively associated with U6 snRNA. Introduction of the geo reporter gene cassette under the control of the murine Lsm4 (mLsm4) endogenous promoter showed that the gene was ubiquitously transcribed in embryonic and adult tissues. The insertion of the geo cassette disrupted the mLsm4 allele, and homozygosity for the mutation led to a recessive embryonic lethal phenotype. mLsm4-null zygotes survived to the blastocyst stages, implanted into the uterus, but died shortly thereafter. The early death of mLsm4p-null mice suggests that the role of mLsm4p in splicing is essential and cannot be compensated by other Lsm proteins.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Experimental Pathology, Lund University, S-22185 Lund, Sweden. Phone: 46-46-173-553. Fax: 46-46-158-202. E-mail: reinhard.fassler{at}pat.lu.se.

dagger Present address: Dipartimento di Genetica, Biologia e Biochimica, Università di Torino, Turin, Italy.


Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 2000, p. 1055-1062, Vol. 20, No. 3
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.