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Publication : Mutations in the founder of the MIP gene family underlie cataract development in the mouse.

First Author  Shiels A Year  1996
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  12
Issue  2 Pages  212-5
PubMed ID  8563764 Mgi Jnum  J:31574
Mgi Id  MGI:79060 Doi  10.1038/ng0296-212
Citation  Shiels A, et al. (1996) Mutations in the founder of the MIP gene family underlie cataract development in the mouse. Nat Genet 12(2):212-5
abstractText  The major intrinsic protein (MIP) of the vertebrate eye lens is the first identified member of a sequence-related family of cell-membrane proteins that appears to have evolved by gene duplication. Several members of the MIP family transport water (aquaporins), glycerol and other small molecules in microbial, plant and animal cells. Mutations in two aquaporin homologues of MIP underlie an autosomal recessive form of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and absence of the Colton blood group antigens in humans, whereas, mutation of a third MIP-like gene underlies 'big brain' development in Drosophila. Here we show that distinct mutations in the murine Mip gene underlie one form of autosomal dominant cataract in the mouse. The cataract Fraser mutation is a transposon-induced splicing error that substitutes a long terminal repeat sequence for the carboxy-terminus of MIP. The lens opacity mutation is an amino-acid substitution that inhibits targeting of MIP to the cell-membrane. These allelic cataract mutations provide the first direct evidence that MIP plays a crucial role in the development of a transparent eye lens.
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