| Literature DB >> 24068166 |
Mahmood F Bhutta1, Michael T Cheeseman, Yann Herault, Yuejin E Yu, Steve D M Brown.
Abstract
Chronic otitis media (OM) is common in Down syndrome (DS), but underlying aetiology is unclear. We analysed the entire available mouse resource of partial trisomy models of DS looking for histological evidence of chronic middle-ear inflammation. We found a highly penetrant OM in the Dp(16)1Yey mouse, which carries a complete trisomy of MMU16. No OM was found in the Dp(17)1Yey mouse or the Dp(10)1Yey mouse, suggesting disease loci are located only on MMU16. The Ts1Cje, Ts1RhR, Ts2Yah, and Ts65Dn trisomies and the transchomosomic Tc1 mouse did not develop OM. On the basis of these findings, we propose a two-locus model for chronic middle-ear inflammation in DS, based upon epistasis of the regions of HSA21 not in trisomy in the Tc1 mouse. We also conclude that environmental factors likely play an important role in disease onset.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24068166 PMCID: PMC3843744 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-013-9475-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Fig. 1Map of a murine synteny to human chromosome 21 and of b trisomic regions in mouse models of DS used in this study (showing genes at chromosome breakpoints). The syntenic regions to HSA21 are on MMU16 (76–98 Mb), MMU17 (31–32 Mb), and MMU10 (78–76 Mb). The Tc1 mouse carries an incomplete HSA21 in addition to the normal mouse genome, whereas all other models are trisomic for murine DNA. Known genes are derived from the Ensembl web browser
Microbial status of mouse strains
| Source | Mouse lines | FELASA listed microbial agents | Housing conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Institut Clinique de la Souris | Ts65Dn, Ts1Cje, Ts2Yah, Ts1Rhr | Norovirus, | Individually ventilated cages with HEPA-filtered air |
| Roswell Park | Dp(10)1Yey, Dp(16)1Yey, Dp(17)1Yey | Norovirus, | Individually ventilated cages with HEPA-filtered air |
| University College London | Tc1, Ts65Dn |
| Open cages |
FELASA Federation for Laboratory Animal Science Associations
Mouse strains used in this study, their source, and presence or absence of OM on histology (denominator is for number of ears)
| Mouse line | Background strain | Trisomic segment | Source | Age range (months) | OM in mutant | OM in WT controls |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dp(17)1Yey | B6;129 | MMU17 | Roswell Park | 2–3 | 0/28 | 1/32 | 1 |
| Dp(10)1Yey | B6;129 | MMU10 | Roswell Park | 2–4 | 0/28 | 0/28 | 1 |
| Dp(16)1Yey | B6;129 | MMU16 | Roswell Park | 2–15 | 19/26 | 7/24 | 0.004 |
| Ts1Cje | B6 | MMU16 | ICS | 2 | 2/28 | 0/28 | 0.491 |
| Ts1RhR | B6 | MMU16 | ICS | 2 | 0/36 | 0/36 | 1 |
| Ts2Yah | B6 | MMU16 | ICS | 2 | 0/34 | 0/34 | 1 |
| Ts65Dn | C3H;B6 | MMU16 | ICS | 2 | 2/40a | 0/40 | 0.494 |
| Ts65Dn | C3H;B6 | MMU16 | UCL | 11–16 | 1/12b | 0/22 | 0.353 |
| Tc1 | 129;B6 | HSA21 except | UCL | 2–3 | 0/30 | 0/26 | 1 |
The p values relate to Fisher’s exact test for the difference in OM prevalence in mutants versus wild-type (WT) littermates
UCL University College London, ICS Institut Clinique de la Souris
aTwo ears in this cohort of Ts65Dn mice showed mild oedema of the middle-ear mucoperiosteum, but without leucocyte infiltration
bOne ear showed a small middle-ear exudate with micropolyp formation
Fig. 2Histological section through the middle ear of a Dp(16)1Yey mouse, a Ts65Dn mouse, and a Ts1Cje mouse affected by chronic OM (H&E stain). There is polypoid hyperplasia of the mucoperiosteum (m) with an effusion (e) infiltrated by neutrophils and macrophages. This was present in 19/26 of Dp(16)1Yey mice examined, 3/52 of Ts65Dn mice, and 1/14 Ts1Cje mice
Genes located in the regions Rh46998-D21s11 (region A) and Ifngr2-Rh123045 (region B)
| Gene | Relative transcript level | Function | Candidate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Region A | |||
|
| ? | Coxsackie and adenovirus receptor, maintains tight junctions | ✠ |
|
| ? | Unknown | |
|
| ? | Endocytosis of glycoproteins and sugar-bearing pathogens | |
|
| ? | Pancreatic enzyme | |
| Region B | |||
|
| 1.37 | Receptor subunit for interferon γ | ✠ |
|
| 1.43 | Brain development | |
|
| – | May act in protein folding or as a chaperone | |
|
| 1.46 | Purine biosynthesis | |
|
| 1.77 | mRNA splicing cofactor | |
|
| 1.35 | Unknown | |
|
| 1.40 | Unknown | |
|
| 1.42 | Coordinates endocytic membrane traffic | |
|
| 1.40 | ATP synthesis | |
|
| 1.28 | Mitochondrial protein synthesis | |
|
| 0.91 | Prevents intracellular accumulation of myo-inositol | |
|
| 1.32 | Component of voltage-gated potassium channels | |
|
| 1.39 | Unknown | |
|
| – | Component of voltage-gated potassium channels | |
|
| 0.79 | Inhibits calcineurin-dependent signaling pathways | |
|
| – | Probable chloride ion channel | |
|
| 1.31 | Functions in haematopoeisis, interacts with TGF-β | ✠ |
Regions A and B are trisomic in the Dp(16)1Yey mouse (develops OM), but not in the Tc1 mouse (no OM noted). Relative transcript levels for region B refer to those in adult lung of Ts65Dn mice (Lyle et al. 2004); region A is not trisomic in Ts65Dn mice. In the proposed multigenic model, genes from each of these regions interact to produce susceptibility to chronic OM. Highlighted “candidates” are those genes known to be involved in immune signaling