Abstract

We discovered a new cataract mutation, kfrs4, in the Kyoto Fancy Rat Stock (KFRS) background. Within 1 month of birth, all kfrs4/kfrs4 homozygotes developed cataracts, with severe opacity in the nuclei of the lens. In contrast, no opacity was observed in the kfrs4/+ heterozygotes. We continued to observe these rats until they reached 1 year of age and found that cataractogenesis did not occur in kfrs4/+ rats. To define the histological defects in the lenses of kfrs4 rats, sections of the eyes of these rats were prepared. Although the lenses of kfrs4/kfrs4 homozygotes showed severely disorganised fibres and vacuolation, the lenses of kfrs4/+ heterozygotes appeared normal and similar to those of wild-type rats. We used positional cloning to identify the kfrs4 mutation. The mutation was mapped to an approximately 9.7-Mb region on chromosome 7, which contains the Mip gene. This gene is responsible for a dominant form of cataract in humans and mice. Sequence analysis of the mutant-derived Mip gene identified a 5-bp insertion. This insertion is predicted to inactivate the MIP protein, as it produces a frameshift that results in the synthesis of 6 novel amino acid residues and a truncated protein that lacks 136 amino acids in the C-terminal region, and no MIP immunoreactivity was observed in the lens fibre cells of kfrs4/kfrs4 homozygous rats using an antibody that recognises the C- and N-terminus of MIP. In addition, the kfrs4/+ heterozygotes showed reduced expression of Mip mRNA and MIP protein and the kfrs4/kfrs4 homozygotes showed no expression in the lens. These results indicate that the kfrs4 mutation conveys a loss-of-function, which leads to functional inactivation though the degradation of Mip mRNA by an mRNA decay mechanism. Therefore, the kfrs4 rat represents the first characterised rat model with a recessive mutation in the Mip gene.

Highlights

  • Kyoto Fancy Rat Stock (KFRS) strains are inbred strains derived from fancy rats to collect new rat mutations and increase the value of the rat model system

  • Mating (KFRS4/Kyo 6 WIAR/lar) F1 rats with kfrs4 rats produced 23 offspring with cataract and 29 offspring without cataract. These results indicate that the kfrs4 mutation is recessive (Figure 1E, Table 1)

  • We present several lines of evidence demonstrating that a mutation in the Mip gene underlies congenital cataract in kfrs4 mutant rats

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Summary

Introduction

Kyoto Fancy Rat Stock (KFRS) strains are inbred strains derived from fancy rats to collect new rat mutations and increase the value of the rat model system. Fancy rat colonies are thought to have been maintained relatively independently of laboratory rats [2]. This characteristic suggests that fancy rats have a unique genetic background that is more similar to that of rat strains that were recently derived from wild rats than to that of laboratory rats; KFRS strains are likely to become a new powerful tool for forward genetic studies of various pathogenic phenotypes among human populations and for providing valuable biological information regarding human disease

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