Literature DB >> 32502155

Facial shape and allometry quantitative trait locus intervals in the Diversity Outbred mouse are enriched for known skeletal and facial development genes.

David C Katz1, J David Aponte1, Wei Liu1, Rebecca M Green1, Jessica M Mayeux2, K Michael Pollard2, Daniel Pomp3, Steven C Munger4, Stephen A Murray4, Charles C Roseman5, Christopher J Percival6, James Cheverud7, Ralph S Marcucio8, Benedikt Hallgrímsson1.   

Abstract

The biology of how faces are built and come to differ from one another is complex. Discovering normal variants that contribute to differences in facial morphology is one key to untangling this complexity, with important implications for medicine and evolutionary biology. This study maps quantitative trait loci (QTL) for skeletal facial shape using Diversity Outbred (DO) mice. The DO is a randomly outcrossed population with high heterozygosity that captures the allelic diversity of eight inbred mouse lines from three subspecies. The study uses a sample of 1147 DO animals (the largest sample yet employed for a shape QTL study in mouse), each characterized by 22 three-dimensional landmarks, 56,885 autosomal and X-chromosome markers, and sex and age classifiers. We identified 37 facial shape QTL across 20 shape principal components (PCs) using a mixed effects regression that accounts for kinship among observations. The QTL include some previously identified intervals as well as new regions that expand the list of potential targets for future experimental study. Three QTL characterized shape associations with size (allometry). Median support interval size was 3.5 Mb. Narrowing additional analysis to QTL for the five largest magnitude shape PCs, we found significant overrepresentation of genes with known roles in growth, skeletal and facial development, and sensory organ development. For most intervals, one or more of these genes lies within 0.25 Mb of the QTL's peak. QTL effect sizes were small, with none explaining more than 0.5% of facial shape variation. Thus, our results are consistent with a model of facial diversity that is influenced by key genes in skeletal and facial development and, simultaneously, is highly polygenic.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32502155     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0233377

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  6 in total

1.  Relating multivariate shapes to genescapes using phenotype-biological process associations for craniofacial shape.

Authors:  Jose D Aponte; David C Katz; Daniela M Roth; Marta Vidal-García; Wei Liu; Fernando Andrade; Charles C Roseman; Steven A Murray; James Cheverud; Daniel Graf; Ralph S Marcucio; Benedikt Hallgrímsson
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2021-11-15       Impact factor: 8.140

2.  MusMorph, a database of standardized mouse morphology data for morphometric meta-analyses.

Authors:  Jay Devine; Marta Vidal-García; Wei Liu; Amanda Neves; Lucas D Lo Vercio; Rebecca M Green; Heather A Richbourg; Marta Marchini; Colton M Unger; Audrey C Nickle; Bethany Radford; Nathan M Young; Paula N Gonzalez; Robert E Schuler; Alejandro Bugacov; Campbell Rolian; Christopher J Percival; Trevor Williams; Lee Niswander; Anne L Calof; Arthur D Lander; Axel Visel; Frank R Jirik; James M Cheverud; Ophir D Klein; Ramon Y Birnbaum; Amy E Merrill; Rebecca R Ackermann; Daniel Graf; Myriam Hemberger; Wendy Dean; Nils D Forkert; Stephen A Murray; Henrik Westerberg; Ralph S Marcucio; Benedikt Hallgrímsson
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-05-25       Impact factor: 8.501

3.  A landmark-free morphometrics pipeline for high-resolution phenotyping: application to a mouse model of Down syndrome.

Authors:  Nicolas Toussaint; Yushi Redhead; Marta Vidal-García; Lucas Lo Vercio; Wei Liu; Elizabeth M C Fisher; Benedikt Hallgrímsson; Victor L J Tybulewicz; Julia A Schnabel; Jeremy B A Green
Journal:  Development       Date:  2021-03-12       Impact factor: 6.862

4.  Complex genetic architecture of three-dimensional craniofacial shape variation in domestic pigeons.

Authors:  Elena F Boer; Emily T Maclary; Michael D Shapiro
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2021-12-16       Impact factor: 2.839

5.  HDAC9 structural variants disrupting TWIST1 transcriptional regulation lead to craniofacial and limb malformations.

Authors:  Naama Hirsch; Idit Dahan; Eva D'haene; Matan Avni; Sarah Vergult; Marta Vidal-García; Pamela Magini; Claudio Graziano; Giulia Severi; Elena Bonora; Anna Maria Nardone; Francesco Brancati; Alberto Fernández-Jaén; Olson J Rory; Benedikt Hallgrímsson; Ramon Y Birnbaum
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 9.438

6.  Testing the accuracy of 3D automatic landmarking via genome-wide association studies.

Authors:  Yoland Savriama; Diethard Tautz
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2022-02-04       Impact factor: 3.542

  6 in total

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