| Literature DB >> 31371754 |
Bret A Moore1, Ann M Flenniken2,3, Dave Clary4, Ata S Moshiri5, Lauryl M J Nutter2,6, Zorana Berberovic2,3, Celeste Owen2,3, Susan Newbigging2,6, Hibret Adissu2,6, Mohammad Eskandarian2,3, Colin McKerlie2, Sara M Thomasy7,8, K C Kent Lloyd4, Christopher J Murphy7,8, Ala Moshiri9.
Abstract
Oculocutaneous syndromes are often due to mutations in single genes. In some cases, mouse models for these diseases exist in spontaneously occurring mutations, or in mice resulting from forward mutatagenesis screens. Here we present novel genes that may be causative for oculocutaneous disease in humans, discovered as part of a genome-wide screen of knockout-mice in a targeted single-gene deletion project. The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) database (data release 10.0) was interrogated for all mouse strains with integument abnormalities, which were then cross-referenced individually to identify knockouts with concomitant ocular abnormalities attributed to the same targeted gene deletion. The search yielded 307 knockout strains from unique genes with integument abnormalities, 226 of which have not been previously associated with oculocutaneous conditions. Of the 307 knockout strains with integument abnormalities, 52 were determined to have ocular changes attributed to the targeted deletion, 35 of which represent novel oculocutaneous genes. Some examples of various integument abnormalities are shown, as well as two examples of knockout strains with oculocutaneous phenotypes. Each of the novel genes provided here are potentially relevant to the pathophysiology of human integumentary, or oculocutaneous conditions, such as albinism, phakomatoses, or other multi-system syndromes. The novel genes reported here may implicate molecular pathways relevant to these human diseases and may contribute to the discovery of novel therapeutic targets.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31371754 PMCID: PMC6672016 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-47286-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Examples of various types of coat color abnormalities seen in knockout mice. Mc1r knockout mice (A, left) have uniformly hypopigmented strawberry blonde coat color compared with wild type C57BL/6N (A, right) control mice. Mice with targeted deletion of the Dct gene have a brown-colored coat (B,B’, left) compared with wild type C57BL/6N (B,B’, right) control mice. Knockout mice with a white patch on the abdomen have been observed with variable penetrance. Just three of eight Endog knockout mice were found to have a white patch on the belly (C,C’), which may be sporadic, or may represent reduced penetrance related to the targeted deletion.
Figure 2Mouse models of syndromic oculocutaneous albinism. Wild type control C57BL/6N mouse with normal retinal pigmentation (A), normal pigmentation of the retinal pigmented epithelium (arrows) and choroid (bracket) (B), normal black coat and cutaneous pigmentation (C), and normal iris pigmentation (D). In contrast, Dtnbp1 mice, which recapitulate features of Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome, have severe hypopigmentation of the ocular fundus (E), marked RPE (arrows) and choroidal hypopigmentation (bracket) seen on histology (F), marked cutaneous and hair hypopigmentation (G), and transillumination defects of the iris due to severely reduced pigmentation (H). Mice with targeted deletion of Lyst, which recapitulate features of Chediak-Higashi syndrome, have moderately reduced fundus pigmentation (I), moderately reduced pigmentation of the RPE (arrows) and choroid (bracket) on histology (J), gray coat color (K), and a gray iris appearance (L). RGC (retinal ganglion cell layer), IPL (inner plexiform layer), INL (inner nuclear layer), IPL (inner plexiform layer), ONL (outer nuclear layer), RPE (retinal pigmented epithelium layer, arrows pointing to this monolayer of cells in B,F,J), CHOR (choroidal layer, demarcated by bracket in B,F,J).