PLoS Genetics (Oct 2006)

Mutation at the Evi1 locus in Junbo mice causes susceptibility to otitis media.

  • Nicholas Parkinson,
  • Rachel E Hardisty-Hughes,
  • Hilda Tateossian,
  • Hsun-Tien Tsai,
  • Debra Brooker,
  • Sue Morse,
  • Zuzanna Lalane,
  • Francesca MacKenzie,
  • Martin Fray,
  • Pete Glenister,
  • Anne-Marie Woodward,
  • Sian Polley,
  • Ivana Barbaric,
  • Neil Dear,
  • Tertius A Hough,
  • A Jackie Hunter,
  • Michael T Cheeseman,
  • Steve D M Brown

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0020149
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 10
p. e149

Abstract

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Otitis media (OM), inflammation of the middle ear, remains the most common cause of hearing impairment in children. It is also the most common cause of surgery in children in the developed world. There is evidence from studies of the human population and mouse models that there is a significant genetic component predisposing to OM, yet nothing is known about the underlying genetic pathways involved in humans. We identified an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced dominant mouse mutant Junbo with hearing loss due to chronic suppurative OM and otorrhea. This develops from acute OM that arises spontaneously in the postnatal period, with the age of onset and early severity dependent on the microbiological status of the mice and their air quality. We have identified the causal mutation, a missense change in the C-terminal zinc finger region of the transcription factor Evi1. This protein is expressed in middle ear basal epithelial cells, fibroblasts, and neutrophil leukocytes at postnatal day 13 and 21 when inflammatory changes are underway. The identification and characterization of the Junbo mutant elaborates a novel role for Evi1 in mammalian disease and implicates a new pathway in genetic predisposition to OM.