Article

Abnormalities in cartilage and bone development in the Apert syndrome FGFR2(+/S252W) mouse.

Institute of Genetic Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 733 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Development (impact factor: 6.6). 09/2005; 132(15):3537-48. DOI:10.1242/dev.01914 pp.3537-48
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Apert syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by malformations of the skull, limbs and viscera. Two-thirds of affected individuals have a S252W mutation in fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2). To study the pathogenesis of this condition, we generated a knock-in mouse model with this mutation. The Fgfr2(+/S252W) mutant mice have abnormalities of the skeleton, as well as of other organs including the brain, thymus, lungs, heart and intestines. In the mutant neurocranium, we found a midline sutural defect and craniosynostosis with abnormal osteoblastic proliferation and differentiation. We noted ectopic cartilage at the midline sagittal suture, and cartilage abnormalities in the basicranium, nasal turbinates and trachea. In addition, from the mutant long bones, in vitro cell cultures grown in osteogenic medium revealed chondrocytes, which were absent in the controls. Our results suggest that altered cartilage and bone development play a significant role in the pathogenesis of the Apert syndrome phenotype.

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Keywords

abnormal osteoblastic proliferation
 
Apert syndrome
 
Apert syndrome phenotype
 
autosomal dominant disorder
 
bone development
 
craniosynostosis
 
ectopic cartilage
 
FGFR2
 
fibroblast growth factor receptor 2
 
knock-in mouse model
 
limbs
 
malformations
 
midline sagittal suture
 
nasal turbinates
 
osteogenic medium
 
S252W mutation
 
significant role
 
thymus
 
Two-thirds
 
vitro cell cultures