Affiliation:
1. Research Center for Radiation Safety
2. Laboratory of Molecular Human Genetics, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kanazawa University, Kanazawa 920-0934
3. Frontier Research Center, National Institute of Radiological Sciences, Inage-ku, Chiba 263-8555
4. Genome Information Research Center, Osaka University, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In addition to xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), mutations in the human
XPG
gene cause early onset of Cockayne syndrome (CS) in some patients (XPG/CS). The CS-causing mutations in such patients all produce truncated XPG proteins. To test the hypothesis that the CS phenotype, with characteristics such as growth retardation and a short life span in XPG/CS patients, results from C-terminal truncations, we constructed mutants with C-terminal truncations in mouse XPG (Xpg) (from residue D811 to the stop codon [
XpgD811stop
] and deletion of exon 15 [
Xpg
Δex15]). In the
XpgD811stop
and
Xpg
Δex15 mutations, the last 360 and 183 amino acids of the protein were deleted, respectively. To generate
Xpg
mutant mice, we devised the shortcut knock-in method by replacing genomic DNA with a mutated cDNA fragment (cDNA-mediated knock in). The control mice, in which one-half of
Xpg
genomic DNA fragment was replaced with a normal
Xpg
cDNA fragment, had a normal growth rate, a normal life span, normal sensitivity to UV light, and normal DNA repair ability, indicating that the
Xpg
gene partially replaced with the normal cDNA fragment retained normal functions. The
XpgD811stop
homozygous mice exhibited growth retardation and a short life span, but the
Xpg
Δex15 homozygous mice did not, indicating that deletion of the last 360 amino acids results in the CS phenotype but deletion of the last 183 amino acids does not. The
XpgD811stop
homozygous mice, however, exhibited a slightly milder CS phenotype than did the
Xpg
null mutant mice, indicating that the XpgD811stop protein still retains some Xpg function that affects the severity of the CS phenotype.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
49 articles.
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