Examining craniofacial variation among crispant and mutant zebrafish models of human skeletal diseases

Author:

Diamond Kelly M.12ORCID,Burtner Abigail E.3,Siddiqui Daanya3,Alvarado Kurtis3,Leake Sanford3ORCID,Rolfe Sara2ORCID,Zhang Chi2ORCID,Kwon Ronald Young45ORCID,Maga A. Murat26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Rhodes College Tennessee Memphis USA

2. Center for Developmental Biology and Regenerative Medicine Seattle Children's Research Institute Seattle Washington USA

3. Department of Biology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

4. Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

6. Division of Craniofacial Medicine, Department of Pediatrics University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractGenetic diseases affecting the skeletal system present with a wide range of symptoms that make diagnosis and treatment difficult. Genome‐wide association and sequencing studies have identified genes linked to human skeletal diseases. Gene editing of zebrafish models allows researchers to further examine the link between genotype and phenotype, with the long‐term goal of improving diagnosis and treatment. While current automated tools enable rapid and in‐depth phenotyping of the axial skeleton, characterizing the effects of mutations on the craniofacial skeleton has been more challenging. The objective of this study was to evaluate a semi‐automated screening tool can be used to quantify craniofacial variations in zebrafish models using four genes that have been associated with human skeletal diseases (meox1, plod2, sost, and wnt16) as test cases. We used traditional landmarks to ground truth our dataset and pseudolandmarks to quantify variation across the 3D cranial skeleton between the groups (somatic crispant, germline mutant, and control fish). The proposed pipeline identified variation between the crispant or mutant fish and control fish for four genes. Variation in phenotypes parallel human craniofacial symptoms for two of the four genes tested. This study demonstrates the potential as well as the limitations of our pipeline as a screening tool to examine multi‐dimensional phenotypes associated with the zebrafish craniofacial skeleton.

Funder

National Science Foundation

NIH Clinical Center

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Anatomy

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