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Systematic screening for skin, hair, and nail abnormalities in a large-scale knockout mouse program

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Sundberg, JP 
Dadras, SS 
Silva, KA 
Kennedy, VE 
Garland, G 

Abstract

The International Knockout Mouse Consortium was formed in 2007 to inactivate (“knockout”) all protein-coding genes in the mouse genome in embryonic stem cells. Production and characterization of these mice, now underway, has generated and phenotyped 3,100 strains with knockout alleles. Skin and adnexa diseases are best defined at the gross clinical level and by histopathology. Representative retired breeders had skin collected from the back, abdomen, eyelids, muzzle, ears, tail, and lower limbs including the nails. To date, 169 novel mutant lines were reviewed and of these, only one was found to have a relatively minor sebaceous gland abnormality associated with follicular dystrophy. The B6N(Cg)-Far2tm2b(KOMP)Wtsi/2J strain, had lesions affecting sebaceous glands with what appeared to be a secondary follicular dystrophy. A second line, B6N(Cg)-Ppp1r9btm1.1(KOMP)Vlcg/J, had follicular dystrophy limited to many but not all mystacial vibrissae in heterozygous but not homozygous mutant mice, suggesting that this was a nonspecific background lesion. We discuss potential reasons for the low frequency of skin and adnexal phenotypes in mice from this project in comparison to those seen in human Mendelian diseases, and suggest alternative approaches to identification of human disease-relevant models.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Hair, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Nails, Malformed, Sebaceous Glands, Skin, Skin Abnormalities, Vibrissae

Journal Title

PLoS ONE

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1932-6203
1932-6203

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Sponsorship
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R21-AR063781 and U42-OD011185). Shared services at The Jackson Laboratory are subsidized by a National Cancer Institute Core Grant (P30-CA034196). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.