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Physiol. Genomics 21: 105-111, 2005. First published January 18, 2005; doi:10.1152/physiolgenomics.00267.2004
1094-8341/05 $8.00
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Received 8 November 2004; accepted in final form 27 December 2004.
Physiological Genomics 21:105-111 (2005)
1094-8341/05 $8.00 © 2005 American Physiological Society

Interacting genetic loci cause airway hyperresponsiveness

Kate G. Ackerman1,2, Hailu Huang1, Hartmut Grasemann3, Chris Puma3, Jonathan B. Singer4, Annie E. Hill5, Eric Lander4, Joseph H. Nadeau5, Gary A. Churchill6, Jeffrey M. Drazen3 and David R. Beier1

1 Division of Genetics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School
2 Division of Emergency Medicine, Children’s Hospital
3 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston
4 Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts
5 Department of Genetics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
6 The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine

Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) is a key physiological component of asthma, and the genetic basis of this complex trait has remained elusive. We created recombinant congenic mice with increased naive AHR by serially backcrossing A/J mice (which have elevated naive AHR) with C57BL/6J mice and selecting for mice with an elevated naive AHR phenotype. The seventh backcross-generation hyperresponsive mice retained A/J loci in three regions. Quantitative trait linkage (QTL) analysis of 123 unselected N8 progeny demonstrated that the AHR phenotype was not associated with any single locus but was significantly associated with an interaction of loci on chromosomes 2 and 6. These findings were confirmed in an independent analysis of chromosome substitution strain mice. The identification of genomic regions containing loci causally associated with AHR and the demonstration that this trait requires their interaction have important implications for the dissection of the genetic etiology of asthma in humans.

complex trait; mouse model; asthma; quantitative trait linkage




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