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EHF is essential for epidermal and colonic epithelial homeostasis, and suppresses Apc-initiated colonic tumorigenesis

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 04:08 authored by Camilla Marstrander ReehorstCamilla Marstrander Reehorst, Rebecca NightingaleRebecca Nightingale, Ian LukIan Luk, Laura JenkinsLaura Jenkins, Frank Koentgen, David WilliamsDavid Williams, Charbel Darido, Fiona Tan, Holly Anderton, Michael Chopin, Kael Schoffer, Moritz EissmannMoritz Eissmann, Michael BuchertMichael Buchert, Dmitri Mouradov, Oliver M Sieber, Matthias ErnstMatthias Ernst, Amardeep Dhillon, John MariadasonJohn Mariadason
Ets homologous factor (EHF) is a member of the epithelial-specific Ets (ESE) family of transcription factors. To investigate its role in development and epithelial homeostasis, we generated a series of novel mouse strains in which the Ets DNA-binding domain of Ehf was deleted in all tissues (Ehf−/−) or specifically in the gut epithelium. Ehf−/− mice were born at the expected Mendelian ratio, but showed reduced body weight gain, and developed a series of pathologies requiring most Ehf−/− mice to reach an ethical endpoint before reaching 1 year of age. These included papillomas in the facial skin, abscesses in the preputial glands (males) or vulvae (females), and corneal ulcers. Ehf−/−mice also displayed increased susceptibility to experimentally induced colitis, which was confirmed in intestinal-specific Ehf knockout mice. Gut-specific Ehf deletion also impaired goblet cell differentiation, induced extensive transcriptional reprogramming in the colonic epithelium and enhanced Apc-initiated adenoma development. The Ets DNA-binding domain of EHF is therefore essential for postnatal homeostasis of the epidermis and colonic epithelium, and its loss promotes colonic tumour development.

Funding

This project was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council project grant (GNT1107831), by National Health and Medical Research Council Fellowships to J.M.M. (GNT1046092), O.M.S. (GNT1136119) and M.E. (GNT1079257/GNT1173814), and by the Operational Infrastructure Support Program, Victorian Government, Australia.

History

Publication Date

2021-06-01

Journal

Development

Volume

148

Issue

12

Article Number

dev199542

Pagination

10p.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists Ltd

ISSN

0950-1991

Rights Statement

© 2021. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd

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