Elsevier

Genomics

Volume 87, Issue 2, February 2006, Pages 191-199
Genomics

Phenotypic and genetic characterization of the Atp7aMo-Tohm mottled mouse: A new murine model of Menkes disease

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ygeno.2005.09.011Get rights and content
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Abstract

Mottled Tohoku (Atp7aMo-Tohm or MoTohm) is an X-linked mutation with mottled pigmentation in heterozygous (MoTohm/+) females and is embryonic lethal at E11 in hemizygous (MoTohm/Y) males. Copper levels were low in the brain and high in the intestine of MoTohm mice. Two congenic strains with ICR or C57BL/6 (B6) background were produced for genetic and phenotypic analyses and revealed that MoTohm/+ females with ICR background survived until adulthood, while most with B6 background died within 2 days after birth. The MoTohm/Y males with both backgrounds died at around E11. Massive hemorrhage was shown in the yolk sac cavity with irregular attachment between the mesoderm and the endothelial cells of blood vessels in the embryos at E10.5, suggesting that this irregular attachment causes embryonic lethality. The MoTohm mutant had a 1440-bp deletion between intron 22 and exon 23 of the Atp7a gene. MoTohm/Y males with the wild-type Atp7a cDNA transgene were rescued from embryonic lethality, confirming that the MoTohm mutant is caused by the defect in the Atp7a gene. This mutant mouse is the most severe model of human Menkes disease in mottled mice established to date and one of the useful models for understanding the gene function of Menkes disease.

Keywords

Menkes disease
Mottled mouse
Atp7a
Copper deficiency
Yolk sac
Embryonic lethality
Transgene

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