The role of Irf6 in tooth epithelial invagination.

Journal: Developmental Biology
Published:
Abstract

Thickening and the subsequent invagination of the epithelium are an important initial step in ectodermal organ development. Ikkα has been shown to play a critical role in controlling epithelial growth, since Ikkα mutant mice show protrusions (evaginations) of incisor tooth, whisker and hair follicle epithelium rather than invagination. We show here that mutation of the Interferon regulatory factor (Irf) family, Irf6 also results in evagination of incisor epithelium. In common with Ikkα mutants, Irf6 mutant evagination occurs in a NF-κB-independent manner and shows the same molecular changes as those in Ikkα mutants. Irf6 thus also plays a critical role in regulating epithelial invagination. In addition, we also found that canonical Wnt signaling is upregulated in evaginated incisor epithelium of both Ikkα and Irf6 mutant embryos.

Authors
James Blackburn, Atsushi Ohazama, Katsushige Kawasaki, Yoko Otsuka Tanaka, Bigang Liu, Kenya Honda, Ryan Rountree, Yinling Hu, Maiko Kawasaki, Walter Birchmeier, Ruth Schmidt Ullrich, Akira Kinoshita, Brian Schutte, Nigel Hammond, Michael Dixon, Paul Sharpe