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Genetic basis of thermal nociceptive sensitivity and brain weight in a BALB/c reduced complexity cross.

Authors :
Beierle JA
Yao EJ
Goldstein SI
Scotellaro JL
Sena KD
Linnertz CA
Willits AB
Kader L
Young EE
Peltz G
Emili A
Ferris MT
Bryant CD
Source :
Molecular pain [Mol Pain] 2022 Jan-Dec; Vol. 18, pp. 17448069221079540.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Thermal nociception involves the transmission of temperature-related noxious information from the periphery to the CNS and is a heritable trait that could predict transition to persistent pain. Rodent forward genetics complement human studies by controlling genetic complexity and environmental factors, analysis of end point tissue, and validation of variants on appropriate genetic backgrounds. Reduced complexity crosses between nearly identical inbred substrains with robust trait differences can greatly facilitate unbiased discovery of novel genes and variants. We found BALB/cByJ mice showed enhanced sensitivity on the 53.5°C hot plate and mechanical stimulation in the von Frey test compared to BALB/cJ mice and replicated decreased gross brain weight in BALB/cByJ versus BALB/cJ. We then identified a quantitative trait locus (QTL) on chromosome 13 for hot plate sensitivity (LOD = 10.7; p < 0.001; peak = 56 Mb) and a QTL for brain weight on chromosome 5 (LOD = 8.7; p < 0.001). Expression QTL mapping of brain tissues identified H2afy (56.07 Mb) as the top transcript with the strongest association at the hot plate locus (FDR = 0.0002) and spliceome analysis identified differential exon usage within H2afy associated with the same locus. Whole brain proteomics further supported decreased H2AFY expression could underlie enhanced hot plate sensitivity, and identified ACADS as a candidate for reduced brain weight. To summarize, a BALB/c reduced complexity cross combined with multiple-omics approaches facilitated identification of candidate genes underlying thermal nociception and brain weight. These substrains provide a powerful, reciprocal platform for future validation of candidate variants.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1744-8069
Volume :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular pain
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35088629
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/17448069221079540