ABSTRACT
Single-nucleotide mutations in human SIX1 result in amino acid substitutions in either the protein-protein interaction domain or the homeodomain, and cause ∼4% of branchio-otic (BOS) and branchio-oto-renal (BOR) cases. The phenotypic variation between patients with the same mutation, even within affected members of the same family, make it difficult to functionally distinguish between the different SIX1 mutations. We made four of the BOS/BOR substitutions in the Xenopus Six1 protein (V17E, R110W, W122R, Y129C), which is 100% identical to human in both the protein-protein interaction domain and the homeodomain, and expressed them in embryos to determine whether they cause differential changes in early craniofacial gene expression, otic gene expression or otic morphology. We confirmed that, similar to the human mutants, all four mutant Xenopus Six1 proteins access the nucleus but are transcriptionally deficient. Analysis of craniofacial gene expression showed that each mutant causes specific, often different and highly variable disruptions in the size of the domains of neural border zone, neural crest and pre-placodal ectoderm genes. Each mutant also had differential effects on genes that pattern the otic vesicle. Assessment of the tadpole inner ear demonstrated that while the auditory and vestibular structures formed, the volume of the otic cartilaginous capsule, otoliths, lumen and a subset of the hair cell-containing sensory patches were reduced. This detailed description of the effects of BOS/BOR-associated SIX1 mutations in the embryo indicates that each causes subtle changes in gene expression in the embryonic ectoderm and otocyst, leading to inner ear morphological anomalies.
Footnotes
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing or financial interests.
Author contributions
Conceptualization: S.A.M., A.L.P.T., K.M.N.; Methodology: A.M.S., P.K., A.B.B., A.L.P.T., H.D.M., K.M.N.; Software: A.B.B.; Validation: P.K., A.L.P.T., C.H.S., Y.R.C.; Formal analysis: S.A.M., A.M.S., P.K., A.B.B., A.L.P.T., C.H.S., Y.R.C., H.D.M., K.M.N.; Investigation: A.L.P.T., C.H.S., Y.R.C., H.D.M., K.M.N.; Resources: S.A.M.; Data curation: A.M.S., A.B.B.; Writing - original draft: A.M.S.; Writing - review & editing: S.A.M., P.K., A.B.B., A.L.P.T., C.H.S., Y.R.C., H.D.M., K.M.N.; Visualization: A.B.B., A.L.P.T.; Supervision: S.A.M.; Project administration: S.A.M.; Funding acquisition: S.A.M.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (DE022065 to S.A.M., DE026434 to S.A.M. and K.M.N., with partial support for A.M.S. from HD083157), the National Science Foundation (IOS 0817902 to S.A.M.) and Grinnell College (Grinnel College Committee for the Support of Faculty Scholarship to C.H.S.).
Supplementary information
Supplementary information available online at http://dmm.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/dmm.043489.supplemental
- Received November 18, 2019.
- Accepted January 14, 2020.
- © 2020. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd
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