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Letter
Nature Genetics  36, 750 - 754 (2004)
Published online: 30 May 2004; | doi:10.1038/ng1372

Instability of Hes7 protein is crucial for the somite segmentation clock

Hiromi Hirata1, 3, Yasumasa Bessho1, Hiroshi Kokubu1, Yoshito Masamizu1, Shuichi Yamada1, Julian Lewis2 & Ryoichiro Kageyama1

1  Institute for Virus Research, Kyoto University, Shogoin-Kawahara, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8507, Japan.

2  Vertebrate Development Laboratory, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, UK.

3  Present address: Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-1048, USA.

Correspondence should be addressed to Ryoichiro Kageyama rkageyam@virus.kyoto-u.ac.jp
During somitogenesis, a pair of somites buds off from the presomitic mesoderm every 2 hours in mouse embryos, suggesting that somite segmentation is controlled by a biological clock with a 2-hour cycle1, 2, 3. Expression of the basic helix-loop-helix factor Hes7, an effector of Notch signaling, follows a 2-hour oscillatory cycle controlled by negative feedback; this is proposed to be the molecular basis for the somite segmentation clock4, 5, 6. If the proposal is correct, this clock should depend crucially on the short lifetime of Hes7. To address the biological importance of Hes7 instability, we generated mice expressing mutant Hes7 with a longer half-life (approx30 min compared with approx22 min for wild-type Hes7) but normal repressor activity. In these mice, somite segmentation and oscillatory expression became severely disorganized after a few normal cycles of segmentation. We simulated this effect mathematically using a direct autorepression model. Thus, instability of Hes7 is essential for sustained oscillation and for its function as a segmentation clock.


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Nature Genetics
ISSN: 1061-4036
EISSN: 1546-1718
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