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Publication : Genetic susceptibility to ozone-induced lung hyperpermeability: role of toll-like receptor 4.

First Author  Kleeberger SR Year  2000
Journal  Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol Volume  22
Issue  5 Pages  620-7
PubMed ID  10783135 Mgi Jnum  J:66468
Mgi Id  MGI:1928529 Doi  10.1165/ajrcmb.22.5.3912
Citation  Kleeberger SR, et al. (2000) Genetic susceptibility to ozone-induced lung hyperpermeability: role of toll-like receptor 4. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 22(5):620-7
abstractText  The pollutant ozone (O(3)) induces lung hyperpermeability and inflammation in humans and animal models. Among inbred strains of mice, there is a 3-fold difference in total protein (a marker of permeability) recovered in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid after a 72-h exposure to 0.3 ppm O(3). To determine the chromosomal locations of susceptibility genes, we performed a genome screen using recombinant inbred (RI) strains of mice derived from O(3)-susceptible C57BL/6J (B6) and O(3)-resistant C3H/HeJ (HeJ) progenitors. Each RI strain was phenotyped for O(3)-induced hyperpermeability, and linkage was assessed for 558 markers using Map Manager QTb27. A significant quantitative trait locus (QTL) was identified on chromosome 4. The likelihood ratio chi(2) statistic (16.6) for the peak of the QTL was greater than the significance threshold (16.3) determined empirically by permutation test. This QTL contains a candidate gene, Toll-like receptor 4 (Tlr4 ), that recently has been implicated in innate immunity and endotoxin susceptibility. The amount of the total trait variance explained by the QTL at Tlr4, the gene with the highest likelihood ratio statistic in the QTL, was approximately 70%. To test the role of Tlr4 in O(3)-induced hyperpermeability, BAL protein responses to O(3) were compared in C3H/HeOuJ (OuJ) and HeJ mice that differ only at a polymorphism in the coding region of Tlr4. Significantly greater protein concentrations (430 +/- 35 &mgr;g/ml) were found in OuJ mice compared with HeJ mice (258 +/- 18 &mgr;g/ml) after exposure to O(3). Furthermore, reverse transcriptase/polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated differential expression of Tlr4 message levels between HeJ and OuJ mice after O(3) exposure. Together, results indicate that a QTL on mouse chromosome 4 explains a significant portion of the genetic variance in O(3)-induced hyperpermeability, and support a role for Tlr4 as a strong candidate susceptibility gene.
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