The Kruppel-like transcription factor KLF13 is a novel regulator of heart development
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Abstract
In human, congenital heart defects occur in 1-2% of live birth but the molecular
mechanisms and causative genes remain unidentified in the majority of cases. We have
uncovered a novel transcription pathway important for heart morphogenesis. We report that
KLF13, a member of the Krüppel-like family of zinc finger proteins, is expressed predominantly
in the heart, binds evolutionarily conserved regulatory elements on cardiac promoters and
activates cardiac transcription. KLF13 is conserved across species and knockdown of KLF13 in
Xenopus embryos lead to atrial septal defects and hypotrabeculation similar to those observed in
human or mice with hypomorphic GATA-4 alleles. Physical and functional interaction with
GATA-4, a dosage sensitive cardiac regulator, provides a mechanistic explanation for KLF13
action in the heart. The data demonstrate that KLF13 is an important component of the
transcription network required for heart development and suggest that KLF13 is a GATA-4
modifier; by analogy to other GATA-4 collaborators, mutations in KLF13 may be causative for
congenital human heart disease.
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Keywords
heart development, transcription, Krüppel-like transcription factors, BNP, ANP, GATA-4, Xenopus
Citation
The EMBO Journal, 25(22), 5201-5213.
