|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Constant light-induced retinal damage and the RPE65-MET450 variant: assessment of the NZW/LacJ mouse.

First Author  Danciger M Year  2005
Journal  Mol Vis Volume  11
Pages  374-9 PubMed ID  15947737
Mgi Jnum  J:99473 Mgi Id  MGI:3582602
Citation  Danciger M, et al. (2005) Constant light-induced retinal damage and the RPE65-MET450 variant: assessment of the NZW/LacJ mouse. Mol Vis 11:374-9
abstractText  PURPOSE: In a previous constant light-induced retinal damage (CLD) quantitative genetics study between the albino C57BL/6J-c2J (B6al) and BALB/c mouse strains, we identified a very strong and highly significant quantitative trait locus (QTL) on distal Chr 3 that we associated with a variant of the Rpe65 gene. The B6al strain carries the MET450 variant of RPE65 and is resistant to CLD while the BALB/c strain carries the LEU450 variant and is sensitive. Since then, we have discovered that the NZW/LacJ (NZW) albino mouse strain is sensitive to CLD but carries the MET450 variant of RPE65. The purpose of this study was to determine if the NZW mouse disproves the hypothesis that the MET450 variant of RPE65 protects the mouse retina against constant light-induced retinal damage. METHODS: F2 progeny were bred from an intercross between the NZW/LacJ and B6al mouse strains. After a prolonged exposure to moderate constant light, F2 mice were phenotyped for retinal outer nuclear layer thickness as the quantitative trait. A subset of 156 of the 201 F2 mice was genotyped for a set of markers spanning the genome, and any marker with a significant association with the quantitative trait was genotyped in the remaining 45 F2s. Data were analyzed for QTL by the Map Manager QTX software. RESULTS: No QTL was identified at distal Chr 3, although several QTL on Chrs 1 (two), 10, 13, 14, 16, and X were detected. One QTL on middle Chr 1 (LOD 5.22) mapped to the same location of a QTL (LOD 6.8) in a previous intense, short exposure light-induced retinal damage study conducted with an intercross between the 129S1/SvImJ and BALB/c strains. QTL on Chrs 1 (distal), 10, and 14 also appeared in other retinal damage quantitative genetics studies. Three pairs of genes exhibited significant epistatic effects. Two of the pairs involved synergistic interactions between NZW and B6al alleles, and the third between two B6al alleles. CONCLUSIONS: If another gene besides Rpe65 was responsible for the QTL in the original BALB/c x B6al study, and the NZW mouse carried a light sensitive allele of this gene, a QTL should have been present in this study. Since a QTL on Chr 3 was not found, the hypothesis that RPE65-MET450 protects the retina from constant light-induced damage is left intact. The explanation for the NZW mouse being sensitive to constant light while carrying the RPE65-MET450 variant is that other light sensitive QTL (gene alleles) negate the protective effect.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

14 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression