Mll4 regulates postnatal palate growth and midpalatal suture development

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Abstract

MLL4, also known as KMT2D, is a histone methyltransferase that acts as an important epigenetic regulator during various organogenesis programs. Mutations in the MLL4 gene are the major cause for Kabuki syndrome, a human developmental disorder that involves craniofacial birth defects, including anomalies in the palate. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of Mll4 and the underlying mechanisms in the development and growth of the palate. We generated a novel conditional knockout (cKO) mouse model with tissue-specific deletion of Mll4 in the palatal mesenchyme. By using micro-computed tomography (CT), histology, cell mechanism assays, and gene expression analysis approaches, we examined the development and growth of the palate in the Mll4 -cKO mice. Gross intra-oral examination at adult stages showed that Mll4 -cKO mice had defects along the midline of the palate, which included disrupted rugae pattern and widened midpalatal suture. Micro-CT-based skeletal analysis in the adult mice revealed that the overall palate width was decreased in the Mll4 -cKO mice. By using whole-mount and histological staining approaches at perinatal stages, we identified that the midline defects started to appear as early as 1 day prior to birth, manifesting initially as a widened midpalatal suture, accompanied by increased cell apoptosis in the suture mesenchyme cells. Genome-wide analysis of mRNA expression in the midpalatal suture tissue showed that Mll4 is essential for timely expression of major genes for cartilage development, such as Col2a1 and Acan , at birth. These results were validated through immunofluorescence staining, confirming that the expression of chondrogenic markers Sox9 and Col2a1 were markedly decreased, whereas that of the osteogenic marker Runx2 remained unchanged, in the midpalatal suture of the Mll4 -cKO mice. Indeed, time-course histological analysis during postnatal palate growth revealed retardation in the development of the suture cartilage in the Mll4 -cKO mice. In parallel, time-course micro-CT analysis during postnatal palatogenesis confirmed a transverse growth deficit in the palate of the Mll4 -cKO mice. Taken together, our results show that Mll4 is essential for timely occurrence of key cellular and molecular events that lead to proper midpalatal suture development and palate growth.

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