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Variable bone fragility associated with an Amish COL1A2 variant and a knock-in mouse model
Authors
Agarwala
Agarwala
+61 more
Agarwala
Alan R Shuldiner
Bachrach
Bonadio
Brown
Camacho
Carter
Charlotte L Phillips
Chipman
Daniel J McBride
Deak
DiPetrillo
Elizabeth A Streeten
Ethan Daley
Forlino
Forlino
Ganguly
Harbers
Heaney
Jepsen
Joan C Marini
John D Sorkin
Khillan
Kok
Korkko
Korkko
Kozloff
Kraybill
Kuznetsova
Kuznetsova
Leikina
Lund
Lund
Marini
McBride
McBride
Miles
Nadeau
Natalia Kuznetsova
Nicholls
Pereira
Pereira
Pihlajaniemi
Roschger
Saggese
Schwarze
Sergey Leikin
Shao
Shapiro
Sillence
Sillence
Spotila
Stephanie M Carleton
Steven A Goldstein
Streeten
Sue A Shapses
Trivedi
Uveges
van der Sluis
Wang
Zionts
Publication date
1 February 2010
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a heritable form of bone fragility typically associated with a dominant COL1A1 or COL1A2 mutation. Variable phenotype for OI patients with identical collagen mutations is well established, but phenotype variability is described using the qualitative Sillence classification. Patterning a new OI mouse model on a specific collagen mutation therefore has been hindered by the absence of an appropriate kindred with extensive quantitative phenotype data. We benefited from the large sibships of the Old Order Amish (OOA) to define a wide range of OI phenotypes in 64 individuals with the identical COL1A2 mutation. Stratification of carrier spine (L1–4) areal bone mineral density (aBMD) Z -scores demonstrated that 73% had moderate to severe disease (less than −2), 23% had mild disease (−1 to −2), and 4% were in the unaffected range (greater than −1). A line of knock-in mice was patterned on the OOA mutation. Bone phenotype was evaluated in four F 1 lines of knock-in mice that each shared approximately 50% of their genetic background. Consistent with the human pedigree, these mice had reduced body mass, aBMD, and bone strength. Whole-bone fracture susceptibility was influenced by individual genomic factors that were reflected in size, shape, and possibly bone metabolic regulation. The results indicate that the G610C OI (Amish) knock-in mouse is a novel translational model to identify modifying genes that influence phenotype and for testing potential therapies for OI. © 2010 American Society for Bone and Mineral ResearchPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65040/1/90720_ftp.pd
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Last time updated on 04/12/2019
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