PLoS ONE (Apr 2010)

Disheveled hair and ear (Dhe), a spontaneous mouse Lmna mutation modeling human laminopathies.

  • Paul R Odgren,
  • Craig H Pratt,
  • Carole A Mackay,
  • April Mason-Savas,
  • Michelle Curtain,
  • Lindsay Shopland,
  • Tsutomu Ichicki,
  • John P Sundberg,
  • Leah Rae Donahue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0009959
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
p. e9959

Abstract

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Investigations of naturally-occurring mutations in animal models provide important insights and valuable disease models. Lamins A and C, along with lamin B, are type V intermediate filament proteins which constitute the proteinaceous boundary of the nucleus. LMNA mutations in humans cause a wide range of phenotypes, collectively termed laminopathies. To identify the mutation and investigate the phenotype of a spontaneous, semi-dominant mutation that we have named Disheveled hair and ear (Dhe), which causes a sparse coat and small external ears in heterozygotes and lethality in homozygotes by postnatal day 10.Genetic mapping identified a point mutation in the Lmna gene, causing a single amino acid change, L52R, in the coiled coil rod domain of lamin A and C proteins. Cranial sutures in Dhe/+ mice failed to close. Gene expression for collagen types I and III in sutures was deficient. Skulls were small and disproportionate. Skeletons of Dhe/+ mice were hypomineralized and total body fat was deficient in males. In homozygotes, skin and oral mucosae were dysplastic and ulcerated. Nuclear morphometry of cultured cells revealed gene dose-dependent blebbing and wrinkling.Dhe mice should provide a useful new model for investigations of the pathogenesis of laminopathies.