Literature DB >> 24997020

Identification of genomic locus responsible for experimentally induced testicular teratoma 1 (ett1) on mouse Chr 18.

Takehiro Miyazaki1, Yoshie Ikeda, Ikue Kubo, Saeri Suganuma, Nastumi Fujita, Makiko Itakura, Tae Hayashi, Shuji Takabayashi, Hideki Katoh, Yukio Ohira, Masahiro Sato, Motoko Noguchi, Toshinobu Tokumoto.   

Abstract

Spontaneous testicular teratomas (STTs) composed by various kinds of tissues are derived from primordial germ cells (PGCs) in the fetal testes of the mouse. In contrast, intra-testicular grafts of the mouse strain (129/Sv-Ter (+/+)) fetal testes possessed the ability to develop the experimental testicular teratomas (ETTs), indistinguishable from the STTs at a morphological level. In this study, linkage analysis was performed for exploration of possible candidate genes involving in ETT development using F2 intercross fetuses derived from [LTXBJ × 129/Sv-Ter (+/+)] F1 hybrids. Linkage analysis with selected simple sequence length polymorphisms along chromosomes 18 and 19, which have been expected to contain ETT-susceptibility loci, demonstrated that a novel recessive candidate gene responsible for ETT development is located in 1.1 Mb region between the SSLP markers D18Mit81 and D18Mit184 on chromosome 18 in the 129/Sv-Ter (+/+) genetic background. Since this locus is different from the previously known loci (including Ter, pgct1, and Tgct1) for STT development, we named this novel gene "experimental testicular teratoma 1 (ett1)". To resolve the location of ett1 independently from other susceptibility loci, ett1 loci was introduced in a congenic strain in which the distal segment of chromosome 18 in LTXBJ strain mice had been replaced by a 1.99 Mbp genomic segment of the 129/Sv-Ter (+/+) mice. Congenic males homozygous for the ett1 loci were confirmed to have the ability to form ETTs, indicating that this locus contain the gene responsible for ETTs. We listed candidate genes included in this region, and discussed about their possible involvement in induction of ETTs.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24997020     DOI: 10.1007/s00335-014-9529-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mamm Genome        ISSN: 0938-8990            Impact factor:   2.957


  55 in total

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