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Mammalian Genetic Models with Minimal or Complex Phenotypes

Growth and Early Postimplantation Defects in Mice Deficient for the Bromodomain-Containing Protein Brd4

, , , , &
Pages 3794-3802 | Received 20 Sep 2001, Accepted 12 Feb 2002, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

In a gene trap screen we recovered a mouse mutant line in which an insertion generated a null allele of the Brd4 gene. Brd4 belongs to the Fsh/Brd family, a group of structurally related proteins characterized by the association of two bromodomains and one extraterminal domain. Members of this family include Brd2/Ring3/Fsrg1 in mammals, fs(1)h in Drosophila, and Bdf1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Brd4 heterozygotes display pre- and postnatal growth defects associated with a reduced proliferation rate. These mice also exhibit a variety of anatomical abnormalities: head malformations, absence of subcutaneous fat, cataracts, and abnormal liver cells. In primary cell cultures, heterozygous cells also display reduced proliferation rates and moderate sensitivity to methyl methanesulfonate. Embryos nullizygous for Brd4 die shortly after implantation and are compromised in their ability to maintain an inner cell mass in vitro, suggesting a role in fundamental cellular processes. Finally, sequence comparisons suggest that Brd4 is likely to correspond to the Brd-like element of the mediator of transcriptional regulation isolated by Y. W. Jiang, P. Veschambre, H. Erdjument-Bromage, P. Tempst, J. W. Conaway, R. C. Conaway, and R. D. Kornberg (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95: 8538-8543, 1998) and the Brd4 mutant phenotype is discussed in light of this result. Together, our results provide the first genetic evidence for an in vivo role in mammals for a member of the Fsh/Brd family.

We are especially grateful to Françoise Poirier for her invaluable help during the preparation of the manuscript. We also thank Margaret Buckingham, Alain Sarasin, Thierry Magnaldo, and Jean-Pierre Rousset for comments on the manuscript. We thank Dimitris Kioussis and Owen Williams for thymocyte cultures and Judy Fletcher for FISH.

This work was supported by the MRC and by a Marie Curie training grant from the European Commission to D.H.

D.H. and S.L.B. contributed equally to this work.

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