Mice deficient for Rb are nonviable and show defects in neurogenesis and haematopoiesis

EYHP Lee, CY Chang, N Hu, YCJ Wang, CC Lai… - Nature, 1992 - nature.com
EYHP Lee, CY Chang, N Hu, YCJ Wang, CC Lai, K Herrup, WH Lee, A Bradley
Nature, 1992nature.com
The retinoblastoma gene, a prototypic tumour-suppressor gene, encodes a nuclear
phosphoprotein (Rb). To understand better the role of Rb in development and in
tumorigenesis, mice with an insertional mutation in exon 20 of the Rb-1 locus were
generated. Homozygous mutants die before the 16th embryonic day with multiple defects.
The haematopoietic system is abnormal; there is a significant increase in the number of
immature nucleated erythrocytes. In the nervous system, ectopic mitoses and massive cell …
Abstract
The retinoblastoma gene, a prototypic tumour-suppressor gene, encodes a nuclear phosphoprotein (Rb). To understand better the role of Rb in development and in tumorigenesis, mice with an insertional mutation in exon 20 of the Rb-1 locus were generated. Homozygous mutants die before the 16th embryonic day with multiple defects. The haematopoietic system is abnormal; there is a significant increase in the number of immature nucleated erythrocytes. In the nervous system, ectopic mitoses and massive cell death are found, particularly in the hindbrain. All spinal ganglion cells die, but the neural retina is unaffected. Transfer of the human retinoblastoma (RB) mini-transgene into the mutant mice corrects the developmental defects. Thus, Rb is essential for normal mouse development.
nature.com