Plzf is required in adult male germ cells for stem cell self-renewal
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Authors
McLean, Derek J.
de Rooij, Dirk G.
Sharma, Manju
Braun, Robert E.
Griswold, Michael D.
Morris, Jamie L.
Buass, F. William
Kirsh, Andrew L.
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Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Adult germline stem cells are capable of self-renewal, tissue regeneration
and production of large numbers of differentiated progeny. We show here
that the classical mouse mutant luxoid affects adult germline stem cell
self-renewal. Young homozygous luxoid mutant mice produce limited numbers
of normal spermatozoa and then progressively lose their germ line after
birth. Transplantation studies showed that germ cells from mutant mice did
not colonize recipient testes, suggesting that the defect is intrinsic to
the stem cells. We determined that the luxoid mutant contains a nonsense
mutation in the gene encoding Plzf, a transcriptional repressor that
regulates the epigenetic state of undifferentiated cells, and showed that
Plzf is coexpressed with Oct4 in undifferentiated spermatogonia. This is
the first gene shown to be required in germ cells for stem cell
self-renewal in mammals.
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Citation
Nat Genet. 2004 Jun;36(6):647-52. Epub 2004 May 23
