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Dive into the research topics where S. Steven Potter is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Steven Potter.


Cell | 1991

A functional c-myb gene is required for normal murine fetal hepatic hematopoiesis

Michael L. Mucenski; Kersten McLain; Ann B. Kier; Steven H. Swerdlow; Claire M. Schreiner; Thomas A. Miller; Daniel W. Pietryga; William J. Scott; S. Steven Potter

The c-myb proto-oncogene encodes a sequence-specific DNA-binding protein. To better understand its normal biological function, we have altered the c-myb gene by homologous recombination in mouse embryonic stem cells. Resulting homozygous c-myb mutant mice displayed an interesting phenotype. At day 13 of gestation these mice appeared normal, suggesting that c-myb is not essential for early development. By day 15, however, the mutant mice were severely anemic. Analysis indicated that embryonic erythropoiesis, which occurs in the yolk sac, was not impaired by the c-myb alteration. Adult-type erythropoiesis, which first takes place in the fetal liver, was greatly diminished in c-myb mutants, however. Additional hematopoietic lineages were similarly affected. These results are compatible with a role for c-myb in maintaining the proliferative state of hematopoietic progenitor cells.


Nature | 1997

Mutation of an axonemal dynein affects left-right asymmetry in inversus viscerum mice

Dorothy M. Supp; David P. Witte; S. Steven Potter; Martina Brueckner

The development of characteristic visceral asymmetries along the left–right (LR) axis in an initially bilaterally symmetrical embryo is an essential feature of vertebrate patterning. The allelic mouse mutations inversus viscerum (iv) and legless (lgl) produce LR inversion, or situs inversus, in half of live-born homozygotes. This suggests that the iv gene product drives correct LR determination, and in its absence this process is randomized. These mutations provide tools for studying the development of LR-handed asymmetry and provide mouse models of human lateralization defects. At the molecular level, the normally LR asymmetric expression patterns of nodal and lefty are randomized in iv/iv embryos, suggesting that iv functions early in the genetic hierarchy of LRspecification. Here we report the positional cloning of an axonemal dynein heavy-chain gene, left/right-dynein (lrd), that is mutated in both lgl and iv. lrd is expressed in the node of the embryo at embryonic day 7.5, consistent with its having a role in LR development. Our findings indicate that dynein, a microtubule-based motor, is involved in the determination of LR-handed asymmetry and provide insight into the early molecular mechanisms of this process.


Cell | 1998

LIM Homeodomain Factors Lhx3 and Lhx4 Assign Subtype Identities for Motor Neurons

Kamal Sharma; Hui Z. Sheng; Karen Lettieri; Hung Li; Alexander Karavanov; S. Steven Potter; Heiner Westphal; Samuel L. Pfaff

The circuits that control movement are comprised of discrete subtypes of motor neurons. How motor neuron subclasses develop and extend axons to their correct targets is still poorly understood. We show that LIM homeodomain factors Lhx3 and Lhx4 are expressed transiently in motor neurons whose axons emerge ventrally from the neural tube (v-MN). Motor neurons develop in embryos deficient in both Lhx3 and Lhx4, but v-MN cells switch their subclass identity to become motor neurons that extend axons dorsally from the neural tube (d-MN). Conversely, the misexpression of Lhx3 in dorsal-exiting motor neurons is sufficient to reorient their axonal projections ventrally. Thus, Lhx3 and Lhx4 act in a binary fashion during a brief period in development to specify the trajectory of motor axons from the neural tube.


Neuron | 2006

The Zinc Finger Transcription Factor Sp8 Regulates the Generation and Diversity of Olfactory Bulb Interneurons

Ronald R. Waclaw; Zegary J Allen; Sheila M. Bell; Ferenc Erdélyi; Gábor Szabó; S. Steven Potter; Kenneth Campbell

The molecular mechanisms that regulate the production and diversity of olfactory bulb interneurons remain poorly understood. With the exception of the GABAergic/dopaminergic subtype in the glomerular layer, no information exists concerning the generation of the other subtypes. Here we show that the recently identified zinc finger transcription factor Sp8 is expressed in neurogenic regions, which give rise to olfactory bulb interneurons at embryonic and postnatal time points and remains expressed in the calretinin-expressing and GABAergic/nondopaminergic interneurons of the glomerular layer. Conditional inactivation of Sp8 in the embryonic ventral telencephalon reveals a requirement for the normal generation of these interneuron subtypes. Sp8 conditional mutants exhibit an increase in cell death within the lateral ganglionic eminence and rostral migratory stream. Moreover, mutant neuroblasts/interneurons are misspecified and display abnormal migration patterns in the olfactory bulb, indicating that Sp8 contributes to olfactory bulb interneuron diversity by regulating the survival, migration, and molecular specification of neuroblasts/interneurons.


Developmental Cell | 2008

Atlas of Gene Expression in the Developing Kidney at Microanatomic Resolution

Eric W. Brunskill; Bruce J. Aronow; Kylie Georgas; Bree Rumballe; M. Todd Valerius; Jeremy Aronow; Vivek Kaimal; Anil G. Jegga; Sean M. Grimmond; Andrew P. McMahon; Larry T. Patterson; Melissa H. Little; S. Steven Potter

Kidney development is based on differential cell-type-specific expression of a vast number of genes. While multiple critical genes and pathways have been elucidated, a genome-wide analysis of gene expression within individual cellular and anatomic structures is lacking. Accomplishing this could provide significant new insights into fundamental developmental mechanisms such as mesenchymal-epithelial transition, inductive signaling, branching morphogenesis, and segmentation. We describe here a comprehensive gene expression atlas of the developing mouse kidney based on the isolation of each major compartment by either laser capture microdissection or fluorescence-activated cell sorting, followed by microarray profiling. The resulting data agree with known expression patterns and additional in situ hybridizations. This kidney atlas allows a comprehensive analysis of the progression of gene expression states during nephrogenesis, as well as discovery of potential growth factor-receptor interactions. In addition, the results provide deeper insight into the genetic regulatory mechanisms of kidney development.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

GUDMAP: The Genitourinary Developmental Molecular Anatomy Project

Andrew P. McMahon; Bruce J. Aronow; Duncan Davidson; Jamie A. Davies; Kevin W. Gaido; Sean M. Grimmond; James L. Lessard; Melissa H. Little; S. Steven Potter; Elizabeth L. Wilder; Pumin Zhang

In late 2004, an International Consortium of research groups were charged with the task of producing a high-quality molecular anatomy of the developing mammalian urogenital tract (UGT). Given the importance of these organ systems for human health and reproduction, the need for a systematic molecular and cellular description of their developmental programs was deemed a high priority. The information obtained through this initiative is anticipated to enable the highest level of basic and clinical research grounded on a 21st-century view of the developing anatomy. There are three components to the Genitourinary Developmental Molecular Anatomy Project GUDMAP; all of these are intended to provide resources that support research on the kidney and UGT. The first provides ontology of the cell types during UGT development and the molecular hallmarks of those cells as discerned by a variety of procedures, including in situ hybridization, transcriptional profiling, and immunostaining. The second generates novel mouse strains. In these strains, cell types of particular interest within an organ are labeled through the introduction of a specific marker into the context of a gene that exhibits appropriate cell type or structure-specific expression. In addition, the targeting construct enables genetic manipulation within the cell of interest in many of the strains. Finally, the information is annotated, collated, and promptly released at regular intervals, before publication, through a database that is accessed through a Web portal. Presented here is a brief overview of the Genitourinary Developmental Molecular Anatomy Project effort.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Analysis of early nephron patterning reveals a role for distal RV proliferation in fusion to the ureteric tip via a cap mesenchyme-derived connecting segment.

Kylie Georgas; Bree Rumballe; M. Todd Valerius; Han Sheng Chiu; Rathi D. Thiagarajan; Emmanuelle Lesieur; Bruce J. Aronow; Eric W. Brunskill; Alexander N. Combes; Dave Tang; Darrin Taylor; Sean M. Grimmond; S. Steven Potter; Andrew P. McMahon; Melissa H. Little

While nephron formation is known to be initiated by a mesenchyme-to-epithelial transition of the cap mesenchyme to form a renal vesicle (RV), the subsequent patterning of the nephron and fusion with the ureteric component of the kidney to form a patent contiguous uriniferous tubule has not been fully characterized. Using dual section in situ hybridization (SISH)/immunohistochemistry (IHC) we have revealed distinct distal/proximal patterning of Notch, BMP and Wnt pathway components within the RV stage nephron. Quantitation of mitoses and Cyclin D1 expression indicated that cell proliferation was higher in the distal RV, reflecting the differential developmental programs of the proximal and distal populations. A small number of RV genes were also expressed in the early connecting segment of the nephron. Dual ISH/IHC combined with serial section immunofluorescence and 3D reconstruction revealed that fusion occurs between the late RV and adjacent ureteric tip via a process that involves loss of the intervening ureteric epithelial basement membrane and insertion of cells expressing RV markers into the ureteric tip. Using Six2-eGFPCre x R26R-lacZ mice, we demonstrate that these cells are derived from the cap mesenchyme and not the ureteric epithelium. Hence, both nephron patterning and patency are evident at the late renal vesicle stage.


Development | 2011

The GUDMAP database – an online resource for genitourinary research

Simon Harding; Chris Armit; Jane Armstrong; Jane Brennan; Ying Cheng; Bernard Haggarty; Derek Houghton; Sue Lloyd-MacGilp; Xingjun Pi; Yogmatee Roochun; Mehran Sharghi; Christopher Tindal; Andrew P. McMahon; Brian Gottesman; Melissa H. Little; Kylie Georgas; Bruce J. Aronow; S. Steven Potter; Eric W. Brunskill; E. Michelle Southard-Smith; Cathy Mendelsohn; Richard Baldock; Jamie A. Davies; Duncan Davidson

The GenitoUrinary Development Molecular Anatomy Project (GUDMAP) is an international consortium working to generate gene expression data and transgenic mice. GUDMAP includes data from large-scale in situ hybridisation screens (wholemount and section) and microarray gene expression data of microdissected, laser-captured and FACS-sorted components of the developing mouse genitourinary (GU) system. These expression data are annotated using a high-resolution anatomy ontology specific to the developing murine GU system. GUDMAP data are freely accessible at www.gudmap.org via easy-to-use interfaces. This curated, high-resolution dataset serves as a powerful resource for biologists, clinicians and bioinformaticians interested in the developing urogenital system. This paper gives examples of how the data have been used to address problems in developmental biology and provides a primer for those wishing to use the database in their own research.


Mechanisms of Development | 1997

The Evil proto-oncogene is required at midgestation for neural, heart, and paraxial mesenchyme development

Peter R. Hoyt; Christopher Bartholomew; Amy J. Davis; Katherine E. Yutzey; Laura W. Gamer; S. Steven Potter; James N. Ihle; Michael L. Mucenski

The ecotropic viral integration site-1 (Evi1) locus was initially identified as a common site of retroviral integration in myeloid tumors of the AKXD-23 recombinant inbred mouse strain. The full-length Evi1 transcript encodes a putative transcription factor, containing ten zinc finger motifs found within two domains of the protein. To determine the biological function of the Evi1 proto-oncogene, the full-length, but not an alternately spliced, transcript was disrupted using targeted mutagenesis in embryonic stem cells. Evi1 homozygous mutant embryos die at approximately 10.5 days post coitum. Mutants were distinguished at 10.5 days post coitum by widespread hypocellularity, hemorrhaging, and disruption in the development of paraxial mesenchyme. In addition, defects in the heart, somites, and cranial ganglia were detected and the peripheral nervous system failed to develop. These results correlated with whole-mount in situ hybridization analyses of embryos which showed expression of the Evi1 proto-oncogene in embryonic mesoderm and neural crest-derived cells associated with the peripheral nervous system. These data suggest that Evi1 has important roles in general cell proliferation, vascularization, and cell-specific developmental signaling, at midgestation.


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

Sp8 is crucial for limb outgrowth and neuropore closure

Sheila M. Bell; Claire M. Schreiner; Ronald R. Waclaw; Kenneth S. Campbell; S. Steven Potter; William J. Scott

In this report we describe the developmental expression and function of Sp8, a member of the Sp family of zinc finger transcription factors, and provide evidence that the legless transgene insertional mutant is a hypomorphic allele of the Sp8 gene. Sp8 is expressed during embryogenesis in the forming apical ectodermal ridge (AER), restricted regions of the central nervous system, and tail bud. Targeted deletion of the Sp8 gene gives a striking phenotype, with severe truncation of both forelimbs and hindlimbs, absent tail, as well as defects in anterior and posterior neuropore closure leading to exencephaly and spina bifida. Outgrowth of the limb depends on formation of the AER, a signaling center that forms at the limb bud apex. In Sp8 mutants, the AER precursor cells are induced and initially express multiple appropriate marker genes, but expression of these genes is not maintained and progression to a mature AER is blocked. These observations indicate that Sp8 functions downstream of Wnt3, Fgf10, and Bmpr1a in the signaling cascade that mediates AER formation.

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Eric W. Brunskill

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Larry T. Patterson

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Bruce J. Aronow

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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David P. Witte

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Andrew S. Potter

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Dorothy M. Supp

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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Mike Adam

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Andrew P. McMahon

University of Southern California

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