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Browsing by Author "Cassidy, Annelise M."
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Item Loss-of-function OGFRL1 variants identified in autosomal recessive cherubism families(Oxford University Press, 2024-04-09) Kittaka, Mizuho; Mizuno, Noriyoshi; Morino, Hiroyuki; Yoshimoto, Tetsuya; Zhu, Tianli; Liu, Sheng; Wang, Ziyi; Mayahara, Kotoe; Iio, Kyohei; Kondo, Kaori; Kondo, Toshio; Hayashi, Tatsuhide; Coghlan, Sarah; Teno, Yayoi; Doan, Andrew Anh Phung; Levitan, Marcus; Choi, Roy B.; Matsuda, Shinji; Ouhara, Kazuhisa; Wan, Jun; Cassidy, Annelise M.; Pelletier, Stephane; Nampoothiri, Sheela; Urtizberea, Andoni J.; Robling, Alexander G.; Ono, Mitsuaki; Kawakami, Hideshi; Reichenberger, Ernst J.; Ueki, Yasuyoshi; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineCherubism (OMIM 118400) is a rare craniofacial disorder in children characterized by destructive jawbone expansion due to the growth of inflammatory fibrous lesions. Our previous studies have shown that gain-of-function mutations in SH3 domain-binding protein 2 (SH3BP2) are responsible for cherubism and that a knock-in mouse model for cherubism recapitulates the features of cherubism, such as increased osteoclast formation and jawbone destruction. To date, SH3BP2 is the only gene identified to be responsible for cherubism. Since not all patients clinically diagnosed with cherubism had mutations in SH3BP2, we hypothesized that there may be novel cherubism genes and that these genes may play a role in jawbone homeostasis. Here, using whole exome sequencing, we identified homozygous loss-of-function variants in the opioid growth factor receptor like 1 (OGFRL1) gene in 2 independent autosomal recessive cherubism families from Syria and India. The newly identified pathogenic homozygous variants were not reported in any variant databases, suggesting that OGFRL1 is a novel gene responsible for cherubism. Single cell analysis of mouse jawbone tissue revealed that Ogfrl1 is highly expressed in myeloid lineage cells. We generated OGFRL1 knockout mice and mice carrying the Syrian frameshift mutation to understand the in vivo role of OGFRL1. However, neither mouse model recapitulated human cherubism or the phenotypes exhibited by SH3BP2 cherubism mice under physiological and periodontitis conditions. Unlike bone marrow-derived M-CSF-dependent macrophages (BMMs) carrying the SH3BP2 cherubism mutation, BMMs lacking OGFRL1 or carrying the Syrian mutation showed no difference in TNF-ɑ mRNA induction by LPS or TNF-ɑ compared to WT BMMs. Osteoclast formation induced by RANKL was also comparable. These results suggest that the loss-of-function effects of OGFRL1 in humans differ from those in mice and highlight the fact that mice are not always an ideal model for studying rare craniofacial bone disordersItem One-step generation of a conditional allele in mice using a short artificial intron(Elsevier, 2022-12-24) Cassidy, Annelise M.; Thomas, Destinée B.; Kuliyev, Emin; Chen, Hanying; Pelletier, Stephane; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineDespite tremendous advances in genome editing technologies, generation of conditional alleles in mice has remained challenging. Recent studies in cells have successfully made use of short artificial introns to engineer conditional alleles. The approach consists of inserting a small cassette within an exon of a gene using CRISPR-Cas9 technology. The cassette, referred to as Artificial Intron version 4 (AIv4), contains sequences encoding a splice donor, essential intronic sequences flanked by loxP sites and a splice acceptor site. Under normal conditions, the artificial intron is removed by the splicing machinery, allowing for proper expression of the gene product. Following Cre-mediated recombination of the two loxP sites, the intron is disabled, and splicing can no longer occur. The remaining intronic sequences create a frameshift and early translation termination. Here we describe the application of this technology to engineer a conditional allele in mice using Scyl1 as a model gene. Insertion of the cassette occurred in 17% of edited mice obtained from pronuclear stage zygote microinjection. Mice homozygous for the insertion expressed SCYL1 at levels comparable to wild-type mice and showed no overt abnormalities associated with the loss of Scyl1 function, indicating the proper removal of the artificial intron. Inactivation of the cassette via Cre-mediated recombination in vivo occurred at high frequency, abrogated SCYL1 protein expression, and resulted in loss-of-function phenotypes. Our results broaden the applicability of this approach to engineering conditional alleles in mice.