A mouse gene homologous to the Drosophila gene caudal is expressed in epithelial cells from the embryonic intestine.

  1. P Duprey,
  2. K Chowdhury,
  3. G R Dressler,
  4. R Balling,
  5. D Simon,
  6. J L Guenet, and
  7. P Gruss
  1. Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, FRG.

Abstract

A mouse gene, Cdx-1, was isolated from an embryonic cDNA library using a Drosophila caudal gene probe. The deduced amino acid sequence of Cdx-1 contains conserved sequence domains along the entire gene, as well as a highly conserved caudal-type homeo box. A structural comparison suggests a common ancestral origin of mouse Cdx-1 and Drosophila caudal. The expression of Cdx-1 during embryogenesis was analyzed by Northern blotting and in situ hybridization. Cdx-1-specific transcripts are localized in the epithelial lining of the intestines beginning at 14 days' gestation. The expression of Cdx-1 in the intestine continues into adulthood, but cannot be detected in any other tissues. The Cdx-1 gene is the first homeo-box-containing gene expressed in cells derived from the embryonic endoderm.

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