Abstract

Black coat color (nonagouti) is a widespread classical mutation in laboratory mouse strains. The intronic insertion of endogenous retrovirus VL30 in the nonagouti (a) allele of agouti gene was previously reported as the cause of the nonagouti phenotype. Here, we report agouti mouse strains from East Asia that carry the VL30 insertion, indicating that VL30 alone does not cause the nonagouti phenotype. We find that a rare type of endogenous retrovirus, β4, was integrated into the VL30 region at the a allele through nested retrotransposition, causing abnormal splicing. Targeted complete deletion of the β4 element restores agouti gene expression and agouti coat color, whereas deletion of β4 except for a single long terminal repeat results in black-and-tan coat color. Phylogenetic analyses show that the a allele and the β4 retrovirus originated from an East Asian mouse lineage most likely related to Japanese fancy mice. These findings reveal the causal mechanism and historic origin of the classical nonagouti mutation.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBlack coat color (nonagouti) is a widespread classical mutation in laboratory mouse strains

  • Black coat color is a widespread classical mutation in laboratory mouse strains

  • More than 100 mutations at the agouti locus have been reported in the Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) version 6.12 database, and the a allele is broadly distributed in a variety of inbred strains listed in the International Mouse Strain Resource (IMSR)

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Summary

Introduction

Black coat color (nonagouti) is a widespread classical mutation in laboratory mouse strains. Deletion of the internal β4 in a nonagouti strain using the CRISPR/Cas[9] method caused reversion of the wild-type agouti phenotype, whereas deletion of the β4 except for a single long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence resulted in a black-and-tan coat color. These results clearly demonstrate that the nested retrotransposition of the β4 is the true cause behind the classical nonagouti mutation. This study provides a clear scenario concerning the origin of one of the most famous classical mouse mutations

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