|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Saturation mutagenesis defines novel mouse models of severe spine deformity.

First Author  Rios JJ Year  2021
Journal  Dis Model Mech Volume  14
Issue  6 PubMed ID  34142127
Mgi Jnum  J:307652 Mgi Id  MGI:6724004
Doi  10.1242/dmm.048901 Citation  Rios JJ, et al. (2021) Saturation mutagenesis defines novel mouse models of severe spine deformity. Dis Model Mech 14(6):dmm048901
abstractText  Embryonic formation and patterning of the vertebrate spinal column requires coordination of many molecular cues. After birth, the integrity of the spine is impacted by developmental abnormalities of the skeletal, muscular and nervous systems, which may result in deformities, such as kyphosis and scoliosis. We sought to identify novel genetic mouse models of severe spine deformity by implementing in vivo skeletal radiography as part of a high-throughput saturation mutagenesis screen. We report selected examples of genetic mouse models following radiographic screening of 54,497 mice from 1275 pedigrees. An estimated 30.44% of autosomal genes harbored predicted damaging alleles examined twice or more in the homozygous state. Of the 1275 pedigrees screened, 7.4% presented with severe spine deformity developing in multiple mice, and of these, meiotic mapping implicated N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea alleles in 21% of pedigrees. Our study provides proof of concept that saturation mutagenesis is capable of discovering novel mouse models of human disease, including conditions with skeletal, neural and neuromuscular pathologies. Furthermore, we report a mouse model of skeletal disease, including severe spine deformity, caused by recessive mutation in Scube3. By integrating results with a human clinical exome database, we identified a patient with undiagnosed skeletal disease who harbored recessive mutations in SCUBE3, and we demonstrated that disease-associated mutations are associated with reduced transactivation of Smad signaling in vitro. All radiographic results and mouse models are made publicly available through the Mutagenetix online database with the goal of advancing understanding of spine development and discovering novel mouse models of human disease.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

17 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression