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The c-Myc protein has been implicated in playing a pivotal role in regulating the expression of a large number of genes involved in many aspects of cellular function. Consistent with this view, embryos lacking the c-myc gene exhibit severe developmental defects and die before midgestation. Here, we show that Sox2Cre-mediated deletion of the conditional c-mycflox allele specifically in the epiblast (hence trophoectoderm and primitive endoderm structures are wild type) rescues the majority of developmental abnormalities previously characterized in c-myc knockout embryos, indicating that they are secondary defects and arise as a result of placental insufficiency. Epiblast-restricted c-Myc-null embryos appear morphologically normal and do not exhibit any obvious proliferation defects. Nonetheless, these embryos are severely anemic and die before E12. c-Myc-deficient embryos exhibit fetal liver hypoplasia, apoptosis of erythrocyte precursors and functionally defective definitive hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Specific deletion of c-mycflox in hemogenic or hepatocytic lineages validate the hematopoietic-specific requirement of c-Myc in the embryo proper and provide in vivo evidence to support a synergism between hematopoietic and liver development. Our results reveal for the first time that physiological levels of c-Myc are essential for cell survival and demonstrate that, in contrast to most other embryonic lineages, erythroblasts and hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells are particularly dependent on c-Myc function.
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Development ePress online publication date 11 Jun 2008
doi: 10.1242/dev.022707
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Research article
Placental rescue reveals a sole requirement for c-Myc in embryonic erythroblast survival and hematopoietic stem cell function
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: andreas.trumpp{at}epfl.ch)
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Y. Guo, C. Niu, P. Breslin, M. Tang, S. Zhang, W. Wei, A. R. Kini, G. P. Paner, S. Alkan, S. W. Morris, et al.
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M. Eilers and R. N. Eisenman
Myc's broad reach
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C. He, H. Hu, R. Braren, S.-Y. Fong, A. Trumpp, T. R. Carlson, and R. A. Wang
c-myc in the hematopoietic lineage is crucial for its angiogenic function in the mouse embryo
Development,
July 15, 2008;
135(14):
2467 - 2477.
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