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Publication : Velvet, a dominant Egfr mutation that causes wavy hair and defective eyelid development in mice.

First Author  Du X Year  2004
Journal  Genetics Volume  166
Issue  1 Pages  331-40
PubMed ID  15020428 Mgi Jnum  J:88776
Mgi Id  MGI:3037134 Doi  10.1534/genetics.166.1.331
Citation  Du X, et al. (2004) Velvet, a dominant Egfr mutation that causes wavy hair and defective eyelid development in mice. Genetics 166(1):331-40
abstractText  In the course of a large-scale program of ENU mutagenesis, we isolated a dominant mutation, called Velvet. The mutation was found to be uniformly lethal to homozygotes, which do not survive E13.5. Mice heterozygous for the Velvet mutation are born with eyelids open and demonstrate a wavy coat and curly vibrissae. The mutation was mapped to the proximal end of chromosome 11 by genome-wide linkage analysis. On 249 meioses, the locus was confined to a 2.7-Mb region, which included the epidermal growth factor receptor gene (Egfr). An A --> G transition in the Egfr coding region of Velvet mice was identified, causing the amino acid substitution D833G. This substitution alters an essential triad of amino acids (DFG --> GFG) that is normally required for coordination of the ATP substrate. As such, kinase activity is at least mostly abolished, but quaternary structure of the receptor is presumably maintained, accounting for the dominant effect. Velvet is the first known dominant representative of the Egfr allelic series that is fully viable, a fact that makes it particularly useful for developmental studies.
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