Stella is a maternal
effect gene required for normal early development in mice
Payer B, Saitou M, Barton S C, Thresher R, Dixon J P, Zahn D, Colledge
W H, Carlton M B, Nakano T and Surani M A
Curr Biol 13(23):2110-7 (2003)
SUMMARY
stella is a novel gene specifically expressed in primordial germ cells,
oocytes, preimplantation embryos, and pluripotent cells. It encodes a
protein with a SAP-like domain and a splicing factor motif-like structure,
suggesting possible roles in chromosomal organization or RNA processing.
Here, we have investigated the effects of a targeted mutation of stella
in mice. We show that while matings between heterozygous animals resulted
in the birth of apparently normal stella null offspring, stella-deficient
females displayed severely reduced fertility due to a lack of maternally
inherited Stella-protein in their oocytes. Indeed, we demonstrate that
embryos without Stella are compromised in preimplantation development
and rarely reach the blastocyst stage. stella is thus one of few known
mammalian maternal effect genes, as the phenotypic effect on embryonic
development is mainly a consequence of the maternal stella mutant genotype.
Furthermore, we show that STELLA that is expressed in human oocytes is
also expressed in human pluripotent cells and in germ cell tumors. Interestingly,
human chromosome 12p, which harbours STELLA, is consistently overrepresented
in these tumors. These findings suggest a similar role for STELLA during
early human development as in mice and a potential involvement in germ
cell tumors.
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