PUBLICATION
Adhesion G protein-coupled receptor Gpr126/Adgrg6 is essential for placental development
- Authors
- Torregrosa-Carrión, R., Piñeiro-Sabarís, R., Siguero-Álvarez, M., Grego-Bessa, J., Luna-Zurita, L., Fernandes, V.S., MacGrogan, D., Stainier, D.Y.R., de la Pompa, J.L.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-220303-34
- Date
- 2021
- Source
- Science advances 7: eabj5445 (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- de la Pompa, José Luis, Macgrogan, Donal, Stainier, Didier
- Keywords
- none
- MeSH Terms
- none
- PubMed
- 34767447 Full text @ Sci Adv
Citation
Torregrosa-Carrión, R., Piñeiro-Sabarís, R., Siguero-Álvarez, M., Grego-Bessa, J., Luna-Zurita, L., Fernandes, V.S., MacGrogan, D., Stainier, D.Y.R., de la Pompa, J.L. (2021) Adhesion G protein-coupled receptor Gpr126/Adgrg6 is essential for placental development. Science advances. 7:eabj5445.
Abstract
Mutations in the G protein–coupled receptor GPR126/ADGRG6 cause human diseases, including defective peripheral nervous system (PNS) myelination. To study GPR126 function, we generated new genetic mice and zebrafish models. Murine Gpr126 is expressed in developing heart endocardium, and global Gpr126 inactivation is embryonically lethal, with mutants having thin-walled ventricles but unaffected heart patterning or maturation. Endocardial-specific Gpr126 deletion does not affect heart development or function, and transgenic endocardial GPR126 expression fails to rescue lethality in Gpr126-null mice. Zebrafish gpr126 mutants display unaffected heart development. Gpr126 is also expressed in placental trophoblast giant cells. Gpr126-null mice with a heterozygous placenta survive but exhibit GPR126-defective PNS phenotype. In contrast, Gpr126-null embryos with homozygous mutant placenta die but are rescued by placental GPR126 expression. Gpr126-deficient placentas display down-regulation of preeclampsia markers Mmp9, Cts7, and Cts8. We propose that the placenta-heart axis accounts for heart abnormalities secondary to placental defects in Gpr126 mutants.
Genes / Markers
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping