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  1. Abstract

    The cell type-specific expression of key transcription factors is central to development and disease.Brachyury/T/TBXTis a major transcription factor for gastrulation, tailbud patterning, and notochord formation; however, how its expression is controlled in the mammalian notochord has remained elusive. Here, we identify the complement of notochord-specific enhancers in the mammalianBrachyury/T/TBXTgene. Using transgenic assays in zebrafish, axolotl, and mouse, we discover three conservedBrachyury-controlling notochord enhancers,T3,C, andI, in human, mouse, and marsupial genomes. Acting as Brachyury-responsive, auto-regulatory shadow enhancers,in cisdeletion of all three enhancers in mouse abolishes Brachyury/T/Tbxt expression selectively in the notochord, causing specific trunk and neural tube defects without gastrulation or tailbud defects. The threeBrachyury-driving notochord enhancers are conserved beyond mammals in thebrachyury/tbxtbloci of fishes, dating their origin to the last common ancestor of jawed vertebrates. Our data define the vertebrate enhancers forBrachyury/T/TBXTBnotochord expression through an auto-regulatory mechanism that conveys robustness and adaptability as ancient basis for axis development.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2024
  2. null (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT The FaceBase Consortium was established by the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research in 2009 as a ‘big data’ resource for the craniofacial research community. Over the past decade, researchers have deposited hundreds of annotated and curated datasets on both normal and disordered craniofacial development in FaceBase, all freely available to the research community on the FaceBase Hub website. The Hub has developed numerous visualization and analysis tools designed to promote integration of multidisciplinary data while remaining dedicated to the FAIR principles of data management (findability, accessibility, interoperability and reusability) and providing a faceted search infrastructure for locating desired data efficiently. Summaries of the datasets generated by the FaceBase projects from 2014 to 2019 are provided here. FaceBase 3 now welcomes contributions of data on craniofacial and dental development in humans, model organisms and cell lines. Collectively, the FaceBase Consortium, along with other NIH-supported data resources, provide a continuously growing, dynamic and current resource for the scientific community while improving data reproducibility and fulfilling data sharing requirements. 
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