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Hox10 and Hox11 Genes Are Required to Globally Pattern the Mammalian Skeleton
Deneen M. Wellik and
Mario R. Capecchi*
Mice in which all members of the Hox10 or Hox11 paralogous groupare disrupted provide evidence that these Hox genes are involvedin global patterning of the axial and appendicular skeleton.In the absence of Hox10 function, no lumbar vertebrae are formed.Instead, ribs project from all posterior vertebrae, extendingcaudally from the last thoracic vertebrae to beyond the sacralregion. In the absence of Hox11 function, sacral vertebrae arenot formed and instead these vertebrae assume a lumbar identity.The redundancy among these paralogous family members is so greatthat this global aspect of Hox patterning is not apparent inmice that are mutant for five of the six paralogous alleles.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mario.capecchi{at}genetics.utah.edu
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