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Publication : Evidence of maternal QTL affecting growth and obesity in adult mice.

First Author  Casellas J Year  2009
Journal  Mamm Genome Volume  20
Issue  5 Pages  269-80
PubMed ID  19399551 Mgi Jnum  J:149566
Mgi Id  MGI:3848680 Doi  10.1007/s00335-009-9182-9
Citation  Casellas J, et al. (2009) Evidence of maternal QTL affecting growth and obesity in adult mice. Mamm Genome 20(5):269-80
abstractText  Most quantitative trait loci (QTL) studies fail to account for the effect that the maternal genotype may have on an individual's phenotypes, even though maternal effect QTL have been shown to account for considerable variation in growth and obesity traits in mouse models. Moreover, the fetal programming theory suggests that maternal effects influence an offspring's adult fitness, although the genetic nature of fetal programming remains unclear. Within this context, our study focused on mapping genomic regions associated with maternal effect QTL by analyzing the phenotypes of chromosomes 2 and 7 subcongenic mice from genetically distinct dams. We analyzed 12 chromosome 2 subcongenic strains that spanned from 70 to 180 Mb with CAST/EiJ donor regions on the background of C57BL/6 J, and 14 chromosome 7 subcongenic strains that spanned from 81 to 111 Mb with BALB/cByJ donor regions on C57BL/6ByJ background. Maternal QTL analyses were performed on the basis of overlapping donor regions between subcongenic strains. We identified several highly significant (P < 5 x 10(-4)) maternal QTL influencing total body weight, organ weight, and fat pad weights in both sets of subcongenics. These QTL accounted for 1.9-11.7% of the phenotypic variance for growth and obesity and greatly narrowed the genomic regions associated with the maternal genetic effects. These maternal effect QTL controlled phenotypic traits in adult mice, suggesting that maternal influences at early stages of development may permanently affect offspring performance. Identification of maternal effects in our survey of two sets of subcongenic strains, representing approximately 5% of the mouse genome, supports the hypothesis that maternal effects represent significant sources of genetic variation that are largely ignored in genetic studies.
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