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    Date Issued2020 - 2021 (1)2010 - 2019 (2)2003 - 2009 (1)Author
    Mager, Jesse (4)
    Bach, Ingolf (2)Marcho, Chelsea (2)Rivera-Pérez, Jaime A. (2)Wallingford, Mary C. (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Department of Cell and Developmental Biology (1)Department of Cell Biology (1)Department of Molecular, Cell and Cancer Biology (1)Department of Radiology (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (4)KeywordCell Biology (3)Developmental Biology (3)Genetics and Genomics (2)Reproductive and Urinary Physiology (2)Animals (1)View MoreJournalDevelopmental biology (1)eLife (1)Nature (1)Reproduction (Cambridge, England) (1)

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    Deficient spermiogenesis in mice lacking Rlim

    Wang, Feng; Gervasi, Maria Gracia; Boskovic, Ana; Sun, Fengyun; Rinaldi, Vera D.; Yu, Jun; Wallingford, Mary C.; Tourzani, Darya A.; Mager, Jesse; Zhu, Lihua Julie; et al. (2021-02-23)
    The X-linked gene Rlim plays major roles in female mouse development and reproduction, where it is crucial for the maintenance of imprinted X chromosome inactivation in extraembryonic tissues of embryos. However, while females carrying a systemic Rlim knockout (KO) die around implantation, male Rlim KO mice appear healthy and are fertile. Here, we report an important role for Rlim in testis where it is highly expressed in post-meiotic round spermatids as well as in Sertoli cells. Systemic deletion of the Rlim gene results in lower numbers of mature sperm that contains excess cytoplasm, leading to decreased sperm motility and in vitro fertilization rates. Targeting the conditional Rlim cKO specifically to the spermatogenic cell lineage largely recapitulates this phenotype. These results reveal functions of Rlim in male reproduction specifically in round spermatids during spermiogenesis.
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    MED20 is essential for early embryogenesis and regulates NANOG expression

    Cui, Wei; Marcho, Chelsea; Wang, Yongsheng; Degani, Rinat; Golan, Morgane; Tremblay, Kimberly D.; Rivera-Pérez, Jaime A.; Mager, Jesse (2019-03-01)
    Mediator is an evolutionarily conserved multi-subunit complex, bridging transcriptional activators and repressors to the general RNA polymerase II (Pol II) initiation machinery. Though the Mediator complex is crucial for the transcription of almost all Pol II promoters in eukaryotic organisms, the phenotypes of individual Mediator subunit mutants are each distinct. Here, we report for the first time, the essential role of subunit MED20 in early mammalian embryo development. Although Med20 mutant mouse embryos exhibit normal morphology at E3.5 blastocyst stage, they cannot be recovered at early post-gastrulation stages. Outgrowth assays show that mutant blastocysts cannot hatch from the zona pellucida, indicating impaired blastocyst function. Assessments of cell death and cell lineage specification reveal that apoptosis, inner cell mass, trophectoderm and primitive endoderm markers are normal in mutant blastocysts. However, the epiblast marker NANOG is ectopically expressed in the trophectoderm of Med20 mutants, indicative of defects in trophoblast specification. These results suggest that MED20 specifically, and the Mediator complex in general, are essential for the earliest steps of mammalian development and cell lineage specification.
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    RLIM is dispensable for X-chromosome inactivation in the mouse embryonic epiblast

    Shin, JongDae; Wallingford, Mary C.; Gallant, Judith; Marcho, Chelsea; Jiao, Baowei; Byron, Meg; Bossenz, Michael; Lawrence, Jeanne B.; Jones, Stephen N.; Mager, Jesse; et al. (2014-05-25)
    In female mice, two forms of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) ensure the selective silencing of female sex chromosomes during mouse embryogenesis. Beginning at the four-cell stage, imprinted XCI (iXCI) exclusively silences the paternal X chromosome. Later, around implantation, epiblast cells of the inner cell mass that give rise to the embryo reactivate the paternal X chromosome and undergo a random form of XCI (rXCI). Xist, a long non-coding RNA crucial for both forms of XCI, is activated by the ubiquitin ligase RLIM (also known as Rnf12). Although RLIM is required for triggering iXCI in mice, its importance for rXCI has been controversial. Here we show that RLIM levels are downregulated in embryonic cells undergoing rXCI. Using mouse genetics we demonstrate that female cells lacking RLIM from pre-implantation stages onwards show hallmarks of XCI, including Xist clouds and H3K27me3 foci, and have full embryogenic potential. These results provide evidence that RLIM is dispensable for rXCI, indicating that in mice an RLIM-independent mechanism activates Xist in the embryo proper.
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    Dynamic morphogenetic events characterize the mouse visceral endoderm

    Rivera-Pérez, Jaime A.; Mager, Jesse; Magnuson, Terry (2003-09-23)
    Several lines of evidence suggest that the extraembryonic endoderm of vertebrate embryos plays an important role in the development of rostral neural structures. In mice, neural inductive signals are thought to reside in an area of visceral endoderm that expresses the Hex gene. Here, we have conducted a morphological and lineage analysis of visceral endoderm cells spanning pre- and postprimitive streak stages. Our results show that Hex-expressing cells have a tall, columnar epithelial morphology, which distinguishes them from other visceral endoderm cells. This region of visceral endoderm thickening (VET) is found overlying first the distal and then one side of the epiblast at stages between 5.5 and 5.75 days post coitum (d.p.c.). In addition, we show that the epiblast has an anteroposterior-compressed appearance that is aligned with the position of the VET. Intracellular labeling of VET/Hex-expressing cells reveals an anterior and anterolateral shift from their distal epiblast position. VET/Hex-expressing cells are first localized to the anterior side of the epiblast by 5.75 d.p.c. and form a crescent on the anterior half of the embryo at the onset of gastrulation. Subsequently, VET descendants are distributed along the embryonic/extraembryonic boundary by headfold stages at 7.5 d.p.c. The morphological characteristics and position of VET/Hex-expressing cells distinguishes the future anteroposterior axis of the embryo and provide landmarks to stage mouse embryos at preprimitive streak stages. Moreover, the morphological characteristics of pregastrulation mouse embryos together with the stereotyped shift in the position of visceral endoderm cells reveal similarities among amniote embryos that suggest an evolutionary conservation of the mechanisms that pattern the rostral neurectoderm at pregastrula stages.
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