K. Niederreither et al., Embryonic retinoic acid synthesis is essential for early mouse post-implantation development, NAT GENET, 21(4), 1999, pp. 444-448
A number of studies have suggested that the active derivative of vitamin A,
retinoic acid (RA), may be important for early development of mammalian em
bryos(1,2). Severe vitamin A deprivation in rodents results in maternal inf
ertility(3), precluding a thorough investigation of the role of RA during e
mbryogenesis, Here we show that production of RA by the retinaldehyde dehyd
rogenase-2 (Raldh2) enzyme(4,5) is required for mouse embryo survival and e
arly morphogenesis. Raldh2 is an HAD-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase with
high substrate specificity for retinaldehyde(4,5). Its pattern of expressio
n during mouse development has suggested that it may be responsible for emb
ryonic RA synthesis(4,6). We generated a targeted disruption of the mouse R
aldh2 gene and found that Raldh2(-/-) embryos, which die at midgestation wi
thout undergoing axial rotation (body turning), exhibit shortening along th
e anterioposterior axis and do not form limb buds. Their heart consists of
a single, medial, dilated cavity. Their frontonasal region is truncated and
their otocysts are severely reduced. These defects result from a block in
embryonic RA synthesis, as shown by the lack of activity of RA-responsive t
ransgenes, the altered expression of an RA-target homeobox gene and the nea
r full rescue of the mutant phenotype by maternal RA administration, Our da
ta establish that RA synthesized by the post-implantation mammalian embryo
is an essential developmental hormone whose lack leads to early embryo deat
h.