REVIEW
Hirschsprung's disease: genetic mutations in mice and men
K ROBERTSON MRC Brain Development Programme,Department of Developmental Neurobiology,UMDS Guy's Hospital,London SE1 9RT, UK
S HALL Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology
Hirschsprung's disease is a neuronal dysplasia of the hindgut,
characterised by a loss of neurones, which affects about 1 in 5000 live
births.1 Genetic factors have been implicated in the
aetiology of this disease in about 20% of cases and a dominant pattern
of inheritance has been revealed in several families. The pathogenesis of the aganglionosis is often attributed to a failure
of migration of neural crest cells, although this has not been proven.
Recently, mutations in a developmentally regulated receptor tyrosine
kinase gene, ret, and mutations in the endothelin
receptor-B gene (ENDR-B) have both been linked to familial
Hirschsprung's disease in humans.4-6 Moreover, certain
mutant mouse strains
namely piebald lethal and lethal spotted
exhibit
striking similarities to the human condition. The mutation which gives
rise to piebald lethal has now been found to be in the ENDR-B
gene,7 and the mutation associated with lethal spotted
occurs in the gene for endothelin-3 (ET-3), a ligand for
ENDR-B.8
Two transgenic mouse lines have been developed which also reflect the
human disease: ret-k
, which has a
loss of function mutation of the ret
gene,9 and ENDR-B null.10 In addition, the
introduction of a Lac-Z reporter gene into neural crest cells of
aganglionic mice has made it possible to study directly the fate of
enteric neuroblasts which are affected by "Hirschsprung's-like"
mutations.11 Here, we review the possible roles of RET and
endothelin in the normal development of the enteric nervous system, and
the significance of their mutated forms in the pathogenesis of familial
aganglionosis.
This review focuses on recent advances in our understanding of the
genetic basis of the lesions which have been implicated in congenital
forms of Hirschsprung's disease. Disruption of these genes in the
mouse, either by transgenic "knockout" approaches or in mutant
mouse lines, offers the prospect of greater understanding of both the
cellular and developmental bases of the human disease.
(GUT 1997;41:436-441)
© 1997 by Gut
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