Published January 10, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Genetic Interactions between Chromosomes 11 and 18 Contribute to Airway Hyperresponsiveness in Mice

Description

We used two-dimensional quantitative trait locus analysis to identify interacting genetic loci that contribute to the native airway constrictor hyperresponsiveness to methacholine that characterizes A/J mice, relative to C57BL/6J mice. We quantified airway responsiveness to intravenous methacholine boluses in eighty-eight (C57BL/6J X A/J) F2 and twenty-seven (A/J X C57BL/6J) F2 mice as well as ten A/J mice and six C57BL/6J mice; all studies were performed in male mice. Mice were genotyped at 384 SNP markers, and from these data two-QTL analyses disclosed one pair of interacting loci on chromosomes 11 and 18; the homozygous A/J genotype at each locus constituted the genetic interaction linked to the hyperresponsive A/J phenotype. Bioinformatic network analysis of potential interactions among proteins encoded by genes in the linked regions disclosed two high priority subnetworks - Myl7, Rock1, Limk2; and Npc1, Npc1l1. Evidence in the literature supports the possibility that either or both networks could contribute to the regulation of airway constrictor responsiveness. Together, these results should stimulate evaluation of the genetic contribution of these networks in the regulation of airway responsiveness in humans.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0029579
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10520

Funding

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development
UL1RR024999-04
National Center for the Multi Scale Analysis of Genomic and Cellular Networks
U54CA121852-5
National Center for the Multi Scale Analysis of Genomic and Cellular Networks
K22LM008308
National Center for the Multi Scale Analysis of Genomic and Cellular Networks
R01HL079398

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine