Specification of germ
cell fate in mice
Saitou M, Payer B, Lange U C, Erhardt S, Barton S C and Surani M A
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 358(1436):1363-70 (2003)
SUMMARY
An early fundamental event during development is the segregation of germ
cells from somatic cells. In many organisms, this is accomplished by the
inheritance of preformed germ plasm, which apparently imposes transcriptional
repression to prevent somatic cell fate. However, in mammals, pluripotent
epiblast cells acquire germ cell fate in response to signalling molecules.
We have used single cell analysis to study how epiblast cells acquire
germ cell competence and undergo specification. Germ cell competent cells
express Fragilis and initially progress towards a somatic mesodermal fate.
However, a subset of these cells, the future primordial germ cells (PGCs),
then shows rapid upregulation of Fragilis with concomitant transcriptional
repression of a number of genes, including Hox and Smad genes. This repression
may be a key event associated with germ cell specification. Furthermore,
PGCs express Stella and other genes, such as Oct-4 that are associated
with pluripotency. While these molecules are also detected in mature oocytes
as maternally inherited factors, their early role is to regulate development
and maintain pluripotency, and they do not serve the role of classical
germline determinants.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=14511483