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Disease model discovery from 3,328 gene knockouts by The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium

Authors :
Meehan, Terrence F
Conte, Nathalie
West, David B
Jacobsen, Julius O
Mason, Jeremy
Warren, Jonathan
Chen, Chao-Kung
Tudose, Ilinca
Relac, Mike
Matthews, Peter
Karp, Natasha
Santos, Luis
Fiegel, Tanja
Ring, Natalie
Westerberg, Henrik
Greenaway, Simon
Sneddon, Duncan
Morgan, Hugh
Codner, Gemma F
Stewart, Michelle E
Brown, James
Horner, Neil
Haendel, Melissa
Washington, Nicole
Mungall, Christopher J
Reynolds, Corey L
Gallegos, Juan
Gailus-Durner, Valerie
Sorg, Tania
Pavlovic, Guillaume
Bower, Lynette R
Moore, Mark
Morse, Iva
Gao, Xiang
Tocchini-Valentini, Glauco P
Obata, Yuichi
Cho, Soo Young
Seong, Je Kyung
Seavitt, John
Beaudet, Arthur L
Dickinson, Mary E
Herault, Yann
Wurst, Wolfgang
de Angelis, Martin Hrabe
Lloyd, K C Kent
Flenniken, Ann M
Nutter, Lauryl M J
Newbigging, Susan
McKerlie, Colin
Justice, Monica J
Murray, Stephen A
Svenson, Karen L
Braun, Robert E
White, Jacqueline K
Bradley, Allan
Flicek, Paul
Wells, Sara
Skarnes, William C
Adams, David J
Parkinson, Helen
Mallon, Ann-Marie
Brown, Steve D M
Smedley, Damian
Source :
Nature Genetics; August 2017, Vol. 49 Issue: 8 p1231-1238, 8p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Although next-generation sequencing has revolutionized the ability to associate variants with human diseases, diagnostic rates and development of new therapies are still limited by a lack of knowledge of the functions and pathobiological mechanisms of most genes. To address this challenge, the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium is creating a genome- and phenome-wide catalog of gene function by characterizing new knockout-mouse strains across diverse biological systems through a broad set of standardized phenotyping tests. All mice will be readily available to the biomedical community. Analyzing the first 3,328 genes identified models for 360 diseases, including the first models, to our knowledge, for type C Bernard–Soulier, Bardet–Biedl-5 and Gordon Holmes syndromes. 90% of our phenotype annotations were novel, providing functional evidence for 1,092 genes and candidates in genetically uncharacterized diseases including arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia 3. Finally, we describe our role in variant functional validation with The 100,000 Genomes Project and others.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10614036 and 15461718
Volume :
49
Issue :
8
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs42859089
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3901