We report the cystathionine-beta synthase (CBS) gene expression pattern during early human embryogenesis (3 to 6 weeks post conception) by in situ hybridization and in fetal and adult tissue by Northern Blot analysis. Probes were chosen to recognize either the common sequence to all known CBS mRNAs or the sequences of two different major exons 1 issued of we have previously identified. We demonstrate by in situ hybridization that CBS is continuously expressed from the earliest stages studied (22 days post conception) during embryogenesis in the tissues of developing embryos which will after birth present clinical abnormalities in homocystinuria patients. It is expressed at an especially high level in the neural and cardiac systems until the liver primordium appears. In embryonic central nervous system, the whole neural tube and primary brain vesicles are labeled. Secondary brain vesicles labeling are dependent on the neuroepithelium differentiation. The ventricular layer of the rhombencephalon, cranial nerve nuclei and then after cerebellar cortex derived from rhombencephalon ventricular layer are strongly labeled. Thalamus and other derivatives of the diencephalon plate, the neuroblastic layer of the retina, lens and dorsal root ganglia are labeled. After 35 days post conception, CBS mRNAs was detected in endocardial cells and in cells derived from the neural crest of the heart and in particular developing mesodermic regions such as the primitive hepatocytes of the liver, mesonephros vesicles, various endocrine glands and developing bones. We could not detect tissue specificity of different probes at this embryonic stage. Northern blot analysis consistently detected mRNA species in fetal 25 weeks post conception brain, liver and kidney. The common cDNA probe revealed the 2.5 and 3.7 kb mRNA species from brain, liver and kidney. The exon 1b probe detected only the 2.5 kb mRNA and the exon 1c probe the 3.7 kb mRNA in these three tissues. In adult tissue, the 1b probe detected only the 2.5 kb mRNA and the 1c probe only the 3.7 kb mRNA in the liver.
Copyright 1999 Academic Press.