scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Bruce W. Birren published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
16 Oct 1997-Nature
TL;DR: This article used positional cloning to show that the gene mutated in sm mice encodes the putative Notch ligand Serrate, which is involved in the earliest stages of limb-bud patterning and support the idea that an ancient genetic mechanism underlies both AER formation in vertebrates and wing-margin formation in flies.
Abstract: The mouse syndactylism ( sm ) mutation impairs some of the earliest aspects of limb development and leads to subsequent abnormalities in digit formation1,2,3. In sm homozygotes, the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) is hyperplastic by embryonic day 10.5, leading to abnormal dorsoventral thickening of the limb bud, subsequent merging of the skeletal condensations that give rise to cartilage and bone in the digits, and eventual fusion of digits. The AER hyperplasia and its effect on early digital patterning distinguish sm from many other syndactylies that result from later failure of cell death in the interdigital areas4,5. Here we use positional cloning to show that the gene mutated in sm mice encodes the putative Notch ligand Serrate2. The results provide direct evidence that a Notch signalling pathway is involved in the earliest stages of limb-bud patterning and support the idea that an ancient genetic mechanism underlies both AER formation in vertebrates and wing-margin formation in flies6,7. In addition to cloning the sm gene, we have mapped three modifiers of sm, for which we suggest possible candidate genes.

110 citations