NRSF/REST is required in vivo for repression of multiple neuronal target genes during embryogenesis
- PMID: 9771705
- DOI: 10.1038/2431
NRSF/REST is required in vivo for repression of multiple neuronal target genes during embryogenesis
Abstract
The neuron-restrictive silencer factor NRSF (also known as REST and XBR) can silence transcription from neuronal promoters in non-neuronal cell lines, but its function during normal development is unknown. In mice, a targeted mutation of Rest, the gene encoding NRSF, caused derepression of neuron-specific tubulin in a subset of non-neural tissues and embryonic lethality. Mosaic inhibition of NRSF in chicken embryos, using a dominant-negative form of NRSF, also caused derepression of neuronal tubulin, as well as of several other neuronal target genes, in both non-neural tissues and central nervous system neuronal progenitors. These results indicate that NRSF is required to repress neuronal gene expression in vivo, in both extra-neural and undifferentiated neural tissue.
Comment in
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Should the master regulator Rest in peace?Nat Genet. 1998 Oct;20(2):109-10. doi: 10.1038/2402. Nat Genet. 1998. PMID: 9771697 No abstract available.
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