BMC Genomics (Mar 2023)

Analysis of structural variation among inbred mouse strains

  • Ahmed Arslan,
  • Zhuoqing Fang,
  • Meiyue Wang,
  • Yalun Tan,
  • Zhuanfen Cheng,
  • Xinyu Chen,
  • Yuan Guan,
  • Laura J. Pisani,
  • Boyoung Yoo,
  • Gill Bejerano,
  • Gary Peltz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-023-09197-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background ‘Long read’ sequencing methods have been used to identify previously uncharacterized structural variants that cause human genetic diseases. Therefore, we investigated whether long read sequencing could facilitate genetic analysis of murine models for human diseases. Results The genomes of six inbred strains (BTBR T + Itpr3tf/J, 129Sv1/J, C57BL/6/J, Balb/c/J, A/J, SJL/J) were analyzed using long read sequencing. Our results revealed that (i) Structural variants are very abundant within the genome of inbred strains (4.8 per gene) and (ii) that we cannot accurately infer whether structural variants are present using conventional short read genomic sequence data, even when nearby SNP alleles are known. The advantage of having a more complete map was demonstrated by analyzing the genomic sequence of BTBR mice. Based upon this analysis, knockin mice were generated and used to characterize a BTBR-unique 8-bp deletion within Draxin that contributes to the BTBR neuroanatomic abnormalities, which resemble human autism spectrum disorder. Conclusion A more complete map of the pattern of genetic variation among inbred strains, which is produced by long read genomic sequencing of the genomes of additional inbred strains, could facilitate genetic discovery when murine models of human diseases are analyzed.

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