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Publication : The effect of the shiverer mutation on myelin basic protein expression in homozygous and heterozygous mouse brain.

First Author  Barbarese E Year  1983
Journal  J Neurochem Volume  40
Issue  6 Pages  1680-6
PubMed ID  6189969 Mgi Jnum  J:7069
Mgi Id  MGI:55540 Doi  10.1111/j.1471-4159.1983.tb08142.x
Citation  Barbarese E, et al. (1983) The effect of the shiverer mutation on myelin basic protein expression in homozygous and heterozygous mouse brain. J Neurochem 40(6):1680-6
abstractText  We report (a) that the shiverer mutation has pleiotropic phenotypic effects on myelin basic protein expression in the CNS of homozygous (shi/shi) mice and (b) that each of the effects of the shiverer allele is expressed co-dominantly with the wild-type allele in heterozygous (+/shi) animals. First, the total amount of myelin basic protein, as determined by radioimmunoassay, that accumulates in the CNS is approximately 0.1% of the wild-type amount in shi/shi animals and approximately 50% in +/shi animals. Second, the four major forms of myelin basic protein, with molecular weights of 21,500, 18,500, 17,000, and 14,000, that are present in wild-type mouse CNS are undetectable in either whole brain or purified myelin of shi/shi animals, and each of the four proteins is reduced commensurately in brain and myelin of +/shi animals. Third, the small amount of myelin basic protein-related material that does accumulate in the shi/shi brain consists of several polypeptides, with molecular weights ranging from 25,000 to 100,000, the pattern of which is different from that found in wild-type brain. The pattern of myelin basic protein-related polypeptides in +/shi brain is a composite of the wild type and the shiverer mutant. Fourth, messenger RNA from shi/shi brain, when translated in vitro, encodes a set of myelin basic protein-related polypeptides qualitatively similar to that encoded by wild-type messenger RNA, except that the 18,500 and 14,000 translation products are greatly reduced, while other myelin basic protein-related translation products are spared. The pattern of myelin basic protein-related translation products for +/shi messenger RNA is intermediate between the patterns for +/+ and shi/shi messenger RNAs. The results suggest that the genetic lesion in the shiverer mutation impinges on the structural gene (or genes) encoding myelin basic protein or on a cis-acting regulatory element controlling that gene (or genes).
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