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    Date Issued2019 (1)2014 (1)Author
    Tremblay, Kimberly D. (2)
    Cui, Wei (1)Degani, Rinat (1)Follit, John A. (1)Golan, Morgane (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Cell and Developmental Biology (1)Department of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (1)Division of Genes and Development, Department of Pediatrics (1)Program in Molecular Medicine (1)Rivera Lab (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordCell Biology (2)Developmental Biology (2)Cell lineage specification (1)Mediator Med20 (1)Molecular Genetics (1)View MoreJournalPLoS genetics (1)Reproduction (Cambridge, England) (1)

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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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    Arf4 is required for Mammalian development but dispensable for ciliary assembly

    Follit, John A.; San Agustin, Jovenal T.; Jonassen, Julie A.; Huang, Tingting; Rivera-Perez, Jaime A.; Tremblay, Kimberly D.; Pazour, Gregory J. (2014-02-20)
    The primary cilium is a sensory organelle, defects in which cause a wide range of human diseases including retinal degeneration, polycystic kidney disease and birth defects. The sensory functions of cilia require specific receptors to be targeted to the ciliary subdomain of the plasma membrane. Arf4 has been proposed to sort cargo destined for the cilium at the Golgi complex and deemed a key regulator of ciliary protein trafficking. In this work, we show that Arf4 binds to the ciliary targeting sequence (CTS) of fibrocystin. Knockdown of Arf4 indicates that it is not absolutely required for trafficking of the fibrocystin CTS to cilia as steady-state CTS levels are unaffected. However, we did observe a delay in delivery of newly synthesized CTS from the Golgi complex to the cilium when Arf4 was reduced. Arf4 mutant mice are embryonic lethal and die at mid-gestation shortly after node formation. Nodal cilia appeared normal and functioned properly to break left-right symmetry in Arf4 mutant embryos. At this stage of development Arf4 expression is highest in the visceral endoderm but we did not detect cilia on these cells. In the visceral endoderm, the lack of Arf4 caused defects in cell structure and apical protein localization. This work suggests that while Arf4 is not required for ciliary assembly, it is important for the efficient transport of fibrocystin to cilia, and also plays critical roles in non-ciliary processes.
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