Steroidogenic factor 1 is the essential transcript of the mouse Ffz-F1 gene

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Abstract

Targeted disruption of the mouse Ftz-F1 gene, which encodes the orphan nuclear receptors ste-roidogenic factor 1 (SF-1) and embryonal long terminal repeat-binding protein (ELP), established that this gene is essential for development of the primary steroidogenic tissues and for male sexual differentiation. Associated with these dramatic developmental abnormalities, all Ftz-F1 -disrupted mice died in the immediate postnatal period and had very low glucocorticoid levels. In this report, we show that treatment with corticosteroids markedly prolonged survival of the Ffz-F1-disrupted mice, proving that steroid hormone deficiency causes their death. We also generated SF-1-specific knockout mice with a targeting construct that specifically disrupted the SF-1 coding sequence without impairing the ELP protein. The phenotype of the SF-1-specific knockout mice was indistinguishable from that observed in Ftz-F1 -disrupted mice that lack both SF-1 and ELP. Taken together, these results indicate that SF-1 is the Fiz-Fi-encoded protein that is required for multiple aspects of endocrine development and for postnatal survival.

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Luo, X., Ikeda, Y., Schlosser, D. A., & Parker, K. L. (1995). Steroidogenic factor 1 is the essential transcript of the mouse Ffz-F1 gene. Molecular Endocrinology, 9(9), 1233–1239. https://doi.org/10.1210/mend.9.9.7491115

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