The study of white-spotting mouse mutations, which create distinct pigment patterns by affecting the maturation and survival of the neural crest-derived melanoblasts, has helped to elucidate the developmental mechanisms required for lineage determination, migration and proliferation. On p. 4665, Rao et al. reveal that Adamts20, a novel member of the ADAMTS family of secreted metalloproteinases, is mutated in belted (bt) mutant mice. These mutants are normally pigmented apart from a 'white belt' of hair that occurs near their hindlimbs. The researchers show that Adamts20 is not expressed by the neural crest-derived melanoblasts but by the mesenchymal tissue through which these cells migrate. The extensive homology between Adamts20 and GON-1, an ADAMTS family member protease that is required for distal tip cell migration in C. elegans, indicates that the role of secreted metalloproteinases in cell migration has been conserved during evolution.
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01 October 2003
Why some mice have white belts
Online ISSN: 1477-9129
Print ISSN: 0950-1991
© 2003.
2003
Development (2003) 130 (19): e1905.
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A defect in a novel ADAMTS family member is the cause of the belted white-spotting mutation
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Why some mice have white belts. Development 1 October 2003; 130 (19): e1905. doi:
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