|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Evaluating possible maternal effect lethality and genetic background effects in Naa10 knockout mice.

First Author  Lyon GJ Year  2024
Journal  PLoS One Volume  19
Issue  5 Pages  e0301328
PubMed ID  38713657 Mgi Jnum  J:349445
Mgi Id  MGI:7639091 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0301328
Citation  Lyon GJ, et al. (2024) Evaluating possible maternal effect lethality and genetic background effects in Naa10 knockout mice. PLoS One 19(5):e0301328
abstractText  Amino-terminal (Nt-) acetylation (NTA) is a common protein modification, affecting approximately 80% of all human proteins. The human essential X-linked gene, NAA10, encodes for the enzyme NAA10, which is the catalytic subunit in the N-terminal acetyltransferase A (NatA) complex. There is extensive genetic variation in humans with missense, splice-site, and C-terminal frameshift variants in NAA10. In mice, Naa10 is not an essential gene, as there exists a paralogous gene, Naa12, that substantially rescues Naa10 knockout mice from embryonic lethality, whereas double knockouts (Naa10-/Y Naa12-/-) are embryonic lethal. However, the phenotypic variability in the mice is nonetheless quite extensive, including piebaldism, skeletal defects, small size, hydrocephaly, hydronephrosis, and neonatal lethality. Here we replicate these phenotypes with new genetic alleles in mice, but we demonstrate their modulation by genetic background and environmental effects. We cannot replicate a prior report of "maternal effect lethality" for heterozygous Naa10-/X female mice, but we do observe a small amount of embryonic lethality in the Naa10-/y male mice on the inbred genetic background in this different animal facility.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

1 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression