
Thomas KR and Capecchi MR:
Targeted disruption of the murine int-1 proto-oncogene resulting in
severe abnormalities in midbrain and cerebellar development.
Nature 1990 Aug 30;346(6287):847-50
ABSTRACT
The int-1 proto-oncogene was first identified as a gene activated in
virally induced mouse mammary tumours. Expression studies, however,
suggest that the normal function of this gene may be in
spermatogenesis and in the development of the central nervous
system. Genes sharing sequence similarity with int-1 have been found
throughout the animal kingdom. For example, int-1 has 54% amino-acid
identity to the Drosophila segment polarity gene wingless (wg). Both
the int-1 and wg gene products seem to be secreted proteins,
presumably involved in cell-cell signalling. We have now explored
the function of int-1 in the mouse by disrupting one of the two
int-1 alleles in mouse embryo-derived stem cells using
positive-negative selection. This cell line was used to generate a
chimaeric mouse that transmitted the mutant allele to its progeny.
Mice heterozygous for the int-1 null mutation are normal and
fertile, whereas mice homozygous for the mutation may exhibit a
range of phenotypes from death before birth to survival with severe
ataxia. The latter pathology in mice and humans is often associated
with defects in the cerebellum. Examination of int-1-/int-1- mice at
several stages of embryogenesis revealed severe abnormalities in the
development of the mesencephalon and metencephalon indicating a
prominent role for the int-1 protein is in the induction of the
mesencephalon and cerebellum.