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Dive into the research topics where Richard R. Behringer is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard R. Behringer.


Cell | 2002

The Novel Zinc Finger-Containing Transcription Factor Osterix Is Required for Osteoblast Differentiation and Bone Formation

Kazuhisa Nakashima; Xin Zhou; Gary R. Kunkel; Zhaoping Zhang; Jian Min Deng; Richard R. Behringer; Benoit de Crombrugghe

We have identified a novel zinc finger-containing transcription factor, called Osterix (Osx), that is specifically expressed in all developing bones. In Osx null mice, no bone formation occurs. In endochondral skeletal elements of Osx null mice, mesenchymal cells, together with osteoclasts and blood vessels, invade the mineralized cartilage matrix. However, the mesenchymal cells do not deposit bone matrix. Similarly, cells in the periosteum and in the condensed mesenchyme of membranous skeletal elements cannot differentiate into osteoblasts. These cells do, however, express Runx2/Cbfa1, another transcription factor required for bone formation. In contrast, Osx is not expressed in Runx2/Cbfa1 null mice. Thus, Osx acts downstream of Runx2/Cbfa1. Because Osx null preosteoblasts express typical chondrocyte marker genes, we propose that Runx2/Cbfa1-expressing preosteoblasts are still bipotential cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Cardiac progenitor cells from adult myocardium: Homing, differentiation, and fusion after infarction

Hidemasa Oh; Steven B. Bradfute; Teresa D. Gallardo; Teruya Nakamura; Vinciane Gaussin; Yuji Mishina; Jennifer S. Pocius; Lloyd H. Michael; Richard R. Behringer; Daniel J. Garry; Mark L. Entman; Michael D. Schneider

Potential repair by cell grafting or mobilizing endogenous cells holds particular attraction in heart disease, where the meager capacity for cardiomyocyte proliferation likely contributes to the irreversibility of heart failure. Whether cardiac progenitors exist in adult myocardium itself is unanswered, as is the question whether undifferentiated cardiac precursor cells merely fuse with preexisting myocytes. Here we report the existence of adult heart-derived cardiac progenitor cells expressing stem cell antigen-1. Initially, the cells express neither cardiac structural genes nor Nkx2.5 but differentiate in vitro in response to 5′-azacytidine, in part depending on Bmpr1a, a receptor for bone morphogenetic proteins. Given intravenously after ischemia/reperfusion, cardiac stem cell antigen 1 cells home to injured myocardium. By using a Cre/Lox donor/recipient pair (αMHC-Cre/R26R), differentiation was shown to occur roughly equally, with and without fusion to host cells.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Sox9 is required for cartilage formation.

Weimin Bi; Jian Min Deng; Zhaoping Zhang; Richard R. Behringer; Benoit de Crombrugghe

Chondrogenesis results in the formation of cartilages, initial skeletal elements that can serve as templates for endochondral bone formation. Cartilage formation begins with the condensation of mesenchyme cells followed by their differentiation into chondrocytes. Although much is known about the terminal differentiation products that are expressed by chondrocytes, little is known about the factors that specify the chondrocyte lineage. SOX9 is a high-mobility-group (HMG) domain transcription factor that is expressed in chondrocytes and other tissues. In humans, SOX9 haploinsufficiency results in campomelic dysplasia, a lethal skeletal malformation syndrome, and XY sex reversal. During embryogenesis, Sox9 is expressed in all cartilage primordia and cartilages, coincident with the expression of the collagen α1(II) gene (Col2a1; refs 8,11, 12). Sox9 is also expressed in other tissues, including the central nervous and urogenital systems. Sox9 binds to essential sequences in the Col2a1 and collagen α2(XI) gene (Col11a2) chondrocyte-specific enhancers and can activate these enhancers in non-chondrocytic cells. Here, Sox9 is identified as a regulator of the chondrocyte lineage. In mouse chimaeras, Sox9-/- cells are excluded from all cartilages but are present as a juxtaposed mesenchyme that does not express the chondrocyte-specific markers Col2a1, Col9a2, Col11a2 and Agc. This exclusion occurred cell autonomously at the condensing mesenchyme stage of chondrogenesis. Moreover, no cartilage developed in teratomas derived from Sox9-/- embryonic stem (ES) cells. Our results identify Sox9 as the first transcription factor that is essential for chondrocyte differentiation and cartilage formation.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Requirement for Wnt3 in vertebrate axis formation

Pentao Liu; Maki Wakamiya; Martin Shea; Urs Albrecht; Richard R. Behringer; Allan Bradley

Several studies have implicated Wnt signalling in primary axis formation during vertebrate embryogenesis, yet no Wnt protein has been shown to be essential for this process. In the mouse, primitive streak formation is the first overt morphological sign of the anterior-posterior axis. Here we show that Wnt3 is expressed before gastrulation in the proximal epiblast of the egg cylinder, then is restricted to the posterior proximal epiblast and its associated visceral endoderm and subsequently to the primitive streak and mesoderm. Wnt3–/– mice develop a normal egg cylinder but do not form a primitive streak, mesoderm or node. The epiblast continues to proliferate in an undifferentiated state that lacks anterior-posterior neural patterning, but anterior visceral endoderm markers are expressed and correctly positioned. Our results suggest that regional patterning of the visceral endoderm is independent of primitive streak formation, but the subsequent establishment of anterior-posterior neural pattern in the ectoderm is dependent on derivatives of the primitive streak. These studies provide genetic proof for the requirement of Wnt3 in primary axis formation in the mouse.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Continuous cell supply from a Sox9-expressing progenitor zone in adult liver, exocrine pancreas and intestine

Kenichiro Furuyama; Yoshiya Kawaguchi; Haruhiko Akiyama; Masashi Horiguchi; S. Kodama; T. Kuhara; Shinichi Hosokawa; Ashraf Elbahrawy; Tsunemitsu Soeda; Masayuki Koizumi; Toshihiko Masui; Michiya Kawaguchi; Kyoichi Takaori; Ryuichiro Doi; Eiichiro Nishi; Ryosuke Kakinoki; Jian Min Deng; Richard R. Behringer; Takashi Nakamura; Shinji Uemoto

The liver and exocrine pancreas share a common structure, with functioning units (hepatic plates and pancreatic acini) connected to the ductal tree. Here we show that Sox9 is expressed throughout the biliary and pancreatic ductal epithelia, which are connected to the intestinal stem-cell zone. Cre-based lineage tracing showed that adult intestinal cells, hepatocytes and pancreatic acinar cells are supplied physiologically from Sox9-expressing progenitors. Combination of lineage analysis and hepatic injury experiments showed involvement of Sox9-positive precursors in liver regeneration. Embryonic pancreatic Sox9-expressing cells differentiate into all types of mature cells, but their capacity for endocrine differentiation diminishes shortly after birth, when endocrine cells detach from the epithelial lining of the ducts and form the islets of Langerhans. We observed a developmental switch in the hepatic progenitor cell type from Sox9-negative to Sox9-positive progenitors as the biliary tree develops. These results suggest interdependence between the structure and homeostasis of endodermal organs, with Sox9 expression being linked to progenitor status.


Developmental Cell | 2001

The Transcription Factors L-Sox5 and Sox6 Are Essential for Cartilage Formation

Patrick Smits; Ping Li; Jennifer Mandel; Zhaoping Zhang; Jian Ming Deng; Richard R. Behringer; Benoit de Crombrugghe; Véronique Lefebvre

L-Sox5 and Sox6 are highly identical Sry-related transcription factors coexpressed in cartilage. Whereas Sox5 and Sox6 single null mice are born with mild skeletal abnormalities, Sox5; Sox6 double null fetuses die with a severe, generalized chondrodysplasia. In these double mutants, chondroblasts poorly differentiate. They express the genes for all essential cartilage extracellular matrix components at low or undetectable levels and initiate proliferation after a long delay. All cartilages are thus extracellular matrix deficient and remain rudimentary. While chondroblasts in the center of cartilages ultimately activate prehypertrophic chondrocyte markers, epiphyseal chondroblasts ectopically activate hypertrophic chondrocyte markers. Thick intramembranous bone collars develop, but the formation of cartilage growth plates and endochondral bones is disrupted. L-Sox5 and Sox6 are thus redundant, potent enhancers of chondroblast functions, thereby essential for endochondral skeleton formation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Haploinsufficiency of Sox9 results in defective cartilage primordia and premature skeletal mineralization

Weimin Bi; Wendong Huang; Deanne J. Whitworth; Jian Min Deng; Zhaoping Zhang; Richard R. Behringer; Benoit de Crombrugghe

In humans, SOX9 heterozygous mutations cause the severe skeletal dysmorphology syndrome campomelic dysplasia. Except for clinical descriptions, little is known about the pathogenesis of this disease. We have generated heterozygous Sox9 mutant mice that phenocopy most of the skeletal abnormalities of this syndrome. The Sox9+/− mice died perinatally with cleft palate, as well as hypoplasia and bending of many skeletal structures derived from cartilage precursors. In embryonic day (E)14.5 heterozygous embryos, bending of radius, ulna, and tibia cartilages was already prominent. In E12.5 heterozygotes, all skeletal elements visualized by using Alcian blue were smaller. In addition, the overall levels of Col2a1 RNA at E10.5 and E12.5 were lower than in wild-type embryos. We propose that the skeletal abnormalities observed at later embryonic stages were caused by delayed or defective precartilaginous condensations. Furthermore, in E18.5 embryos and in newborn heterozygotes, premature mineralization occurred in many bones, including vertebrae and some craniofacial bones. Because Sox9 is not expressed in the mineralized portion of the growth plate, this premature mineralization is very likely the consequence of allele insufficiency existing in cells of the growth plate that express Sox9. Because the hypertrophic zone of the heterozygous Sox9 mutants was larger than that of wild-type mice, we propose that Sox9 also has a role in regulating the transition to hypertrophic chondrocytes in the growth plate. Despite the severe hypoplasia of cartilages, the overall organization and cellular composition of the growth plate were otherwise normal. Our results suggest the hypothesis that two critical steps of the chondrocyte differentiation pathway are sensitive to Sox9 dosage. First, an early step presumably at the stage of mesenchymal condensation of cartilage primordia, and second, a later step preceding the transition of chondrocytes into hypertrophic chondrocytes.


Matrix Biology | 2000

Transcriptional mechanisms of chondrocyte differentiation

Benoit de Crombrugghe; Véronique Lefebvre; Richard R. Behringer; Weimin Bi; Shunichi Murakami; Wendong Huang

With the goal of identifying master transcription factors that control the genetic program of differentiation of mesenchymal cells into chondrocytes, we first delineated a 48-bp chondrocyte-specific enhancer element in the gene for proalpha1(II) collagen (Col2a1), an early and abundant marker of chondrocytes. Our experiments have demonstrated that the HMG-box-containing transcription factor, Sox9 which binds and activates this enhancer element, is required for chondrocyte differentiation and for expression of a series of chondrocyte-specific marker genes including Col2a1, Col9a2, Col11a2 and Aggrecan. In the absence of Sox9 the block in differentiation occurs at the stage of mesenchymal condensation, suggesting the hypothesis that Sox9 might also control expression of cell surface proteins needed for mesenchymal condensation. Since Sox9 also contains a potent transcription activation domain, it is a typical transcription factor. Two other members of the Sox family, L-Sox5 and Sox6, also bind to the 48-bp Col2a1 enhancer and together with Sox9 activate this enhancer as well as the endogenous Col2a1 and aggrecan genes. L-Sox5 and Sox6 have a high degree of sequence identity to each other and are likely to have redundant functions. Except for the HMG-box, L-Sox5 and Sox6 have no similarity to Sox9 and, hence, are likely to have a complementary function to that of Sox9. Our experiments suggest the hypothesis that, like Sox9, Sox5 and Sox6 might also be needed for chondrocyte differentiation. Other experiments, have provided evidence that the Sox9 polypeptide and the Sox9 gene are targets of signaling molecules that are known to control discrete steps of chondrogenesis in the growth plate of endochondral bones. Protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation of Sox9 increases its DNA binding and transcriptional activity. Since PKA-phosphorylated-Sox9 is found in the prehypertrophic zone of the growth plate, the same location where the gene for the receptor of the parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) is expressed and since PTHrP signaling is mediated by cyclic AMP, we have hypothesized that Sox9 is a target for PTHrP signaling. Other experiments have also shown that fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) increase the expression of Sox9 in chondrocytes in culture and that this activation is mediated by the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. These results favor the hypothesis that in achondroplasia, a disease caused by activating mutations in FGF receptor 3, there might also be an abnormally high Sox9 expression.


Development | 2004

Functional analysis of Sox8 and Sox9 during sex determination in the mouse

Marie-Christine Chaboissier; Akio Kobayashi; Valerie I.P. Vidal; Susanne Lützkendorf; Henk J.G. van de Kant; Michael Wegner; Dirk G. de Rooij; Richard R. Behringer; Andreas Schedl

Sex determination in mammals directs an initially bipotential gonad to differentiate into either a testis or an ovary. This decision is triggered by the expression of the sex-determining gene Sry, which leads to the activation of male-specific genes including the HMG-box containing gene Sox9. From transgenic studies in mice it is clear that Sox9 is sufficient to induce testis formation. However, there is no direct confirmation for an essential role for Sox9 in testis determination. The studies presented here are the first experimental proof for an essential role for Sox9 in mediating a switch from the ovarian pathway to the testicular pathway. Using conditional gene targeting, we show that homozygous deletion of Sox9 in XY gonads interferes with sex cord development and the activation of the male-specific markers Mis and P450scc, and leads to the expression of the female-specific markers Bmp2 and follistatin. Moreover, using a tissue specific knock-out approach, we show that Sox9 is involved in Sertoli cell differentiation, the activation of Mis and Sox8, and the inactivation of Sry. Finally, double knock-out analyses suggest that Sox8 reinforces Sox9 function in testis differentiation of mice.


Mechanisms of Development | 1997

Mouse gastrulation: The formation of a mammalian body plan

Patrick P.L. Tam; Richard R. Behringer

The process of gastrulation is a pivotal step in the formation of the vertebrate body plan. The primary function of gastrulation is the correct placement of precursor tissues for subsequent morphogenesis. There is now mounting evidence that the body plan is established through inductive interactions between germ layer tissues and by the global patterning activity emanating from embryonic organizers. An increasing number of mouse mutants have been described that have gastrulation defects, providing important insights into the molecular mechanisms that regulate this complex process. In this review, we explore the mouse embryo before and during gastrulation, highlighting its similarities with other vertebrate embryos and its unique characteristics.

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Jian Min Deng

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Ralph L. Brinster

University of Pennsylvania

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John J. Rasweiler

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Kin Ming Kwan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Ying Wang

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Benoit de Crombrugghe

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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