Journal of Lipid Research (Aug 2006)

QTL mapping for genetic determinants of lipoprotein cholesterol levels in combined crosses of inbred mouse strains

  • Henning Wittenburg,
  • Malcolm A. Lyons,
  • Renhua Li,
  • Ulrike Kurtz,
  • Xiaosong Wang,
  • Joachim Moässner,
  • Gary A. Churchill,
  • Martin C. Carey,
  • Beverly Paigen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 47, no. 8
pp. 1780 – 1790

Abstract

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To identify additional loci that influence lipoprotein cholesterol levels, we performed quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping in offspring of PERA/EiJ×I/LnJ and PERA/EiJ×DBA/2J intercrosses and in a combined data set from both crosses after 8 weeks of consumption of a high fat-diet. Most QTLs identified were concordant with homologous chromosomal regions that were associated with lipoprotein levels in human studies. We detected significant new loci for HDL cholesterol levels on chromosome (Chr) 5 (Hdlq34) and for non-HDL cholesterol levels on Chrs 15 (Nhdlq9) and 16 (Nhdlq10). In addition, the analysis of combined data sets identified a QTL for HDL cholesterol on Chr 17 that was shared between both crosses; lower HDL cholesterol levels were conferred by strain PERA. This QTL colocalized with a shared QTL for cholesterol gallstone formation detected in the same crosses. Haplotype analysis narrowed this QTL, and sequencing of the candidate genes Abcg5 and Abcg8 confirmed shared alleles in strains I/LnJ and DBA/2J that differed from the alleles in strain PERA/EiJ. In conclusion, our analysis furthers the knowledge of genetic determinants of lipoprotein cholesterol levels in inbred mice and substantiates the hypothesis that polymorphisms of Abcg5/Abcg8 contribute to individual variation in both plasma HDL cholesterol levels and susceptibility to cholesterol gallstone formation.

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