Insertion of a knockout-first cassette in Ampd1 gene leads to neonatal death by disruption of neighboring genes expression

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Abstract

AMPD1 is an adenosine monophosphate deaminase that catalyzes the deamination of AMP to IMP. To understand the physiological function of AMPD1, we obtained a strain of Ampd1 mutant mice from KOMP repository, which was generated by a knockout-first strategy. An elevated AMP level and almost complete lack of IMP was detected in the skeletal muscle of E18.5 Ampd1 tm1a/tm1a mice. However, Ampd1 tm1a/tm1a mice died in 2 days postnatally, which was contradicting to previous reports. After removal of the knockout-first cassette and critical exon, mice homozygous for the Ampd1 tm1c/tm1c and Ampd1 tm1d/tm1d alleles survived to adulthood. RNA-seq analysis indicated that the expression of two neighboring genes, Man1a2 and Nras, were disrupted in the Ampd1 tm1a/tm1a mice, but normal in the Ampd1 tm1c/tm1c and Ampd1 tm1d/tm1d mice. The neonatal lethality phenotype in the Ampd1 tm1a/tm1a mice was consistent with the Man1a2-deficient mice. Our results indicated the knockout-first cassette may cause off-target effect by influence the expression of neighboring genes. This study, together with other reports, strongly suggests that removal of targeting cassette by site-specific recombinases is very important for the accurate phenotypic interpretation on mice generated by target mutations.

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Pan, Y., Zhang, L., Liu, Q., Li, Y., Guo, H., Peng, Y., … Li, J. D. (2016). Insertion of a knockout-first cassette in Ampd1 gene leads to neonatal death by disruption of neighboring genes expression. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep35970

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