Mutations inBCOR (Bcl6 corepressor) are found in patients with oculo-facio-cardio-dental (OFCD) syndrome, a congenital disorder affecting visual system development, and loss-of-function studies in zebrafish and Xenopus demonstrate a role for Bcor during normal optic cup development in preventing colobomata. The mechanism whereby BCOR functions during eye development to prevent colobomata is not known, but in other contexts it serves as a transcriptional corepressor that potentiates transcriptional repressionbyBcell leukemia/ lymphoma 6 (BCL6). Here, we have explored the function of the zebrafish ortholog of Bcl6, Bcl6a, during eye development, and our results demonstrate that Bcl6a, like Bcor, is required to prevent colobomata during optic cup formation. Our data demonstrate that Bcl6a acts downstream of Vax1 and Vax2, known regulators of ventral optic cup formation and choroid fissure closure, and that bcl6a is a direct target of Vax2. Together, this regulatory network functions to repress p53 expression and thereby suppress apoptosis in the developing optic cup. Furthermore, our data demonstrate that Bcl6a functions cooperatively with Bcor, Rnf2 and Hdac1 in a commongeneregulatorynetworkthat acts to repressp53andprevent colobomata.Together, thesedatasupport amodel in which p53-dependent apoptosis needs to be tightly regulated for normal optic cup formation and that Bcl6a, Bcor, Rnf2 and Hdac1 activities mediate this regulation. © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, J., Lee, B. K., & Gross, J. M. (2013). Bcl6a function is required during optic cup formation to prevent p53-dependent apoptosis and colobomata. Human Molecular Genetics, 22(17), 3568–3582. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddt211
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.