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Sex-Specific Quantitative Trait Loci Govern Susceptibility to Theiler's Murine Encephalomyelitis Virus-Induced Demyelination
Russell J. Butterfield1,a, Randall J. Roper1,2,a, Dominic M. Rheina, Roger W. Melvoldb, Lia Haynes3,c, Runlin Z. Maa, R. W. Doerged, and Cory Teuscherea Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61802,
b Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202,
c Department of Microbiology-Immunology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611,
d Department of Statistics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907
e Department of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 05405
Corresponding author: Cory Teuscher, C317 Given Medical Bldg., University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405., cteusche{at}zoo.uvm.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: Z-B. ZENG
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Susceptibility to Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus-induced demyelination (TMEVD), a mouse model for multiple sclerosis (MS), is genetically controlled. Through a mouse-human comparative mapping approach, identification of candidate susceptibility loci for MS based on the location of TMEVD susceptibility loci may be possible. Composite interval mapping (CIM) identified quantitative trait loci (QTL) controlling TMEVD severity in male and female backcross populations derived from susceptible DBA/2J and resistant BALBc/ByJ mice. We report QTL on chromosomes 1, 5, 15, and 16 affecting male mice. In addition, we identified two QTL in female mice located on chromosome 1. Our results support the existence of three linked sex-specific QTL on chromosome 1 with opposing effects on the severity of the clinical signs of TMEV-induced disease in male and female mice.
MULTIPLE sclerosis (MS) is the major demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS) in humans, affecting 0.1% of the North American population, and involves both genetic and environmental factors (![]()
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4% (![]()
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Viruses have long been purported to play a role in the etiology of MS. Human herpes virus-6, Epstein-Barr virus, and measles virus have been detected in the brains of MS patients, but no single virus has been associated with all cases (![]()
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H2D and two loci on chromosome 10 have been associated with viral persistence (![]()
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Males and females of the same strain can differ in susceptibility to TMEVD (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Animals:
Male and female BALB/cByJ and DBA/2J mice were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). (BALB/cByJ x DBA/2J) x BALB/cByJ backcross mice (BC1) were bred at Northwestern University School of Medicine (Chicago) and the University of North Dakota (Grand Forks, ND). All mice were maintained in polycarbonate cages and received standard mouse chow and water ad libitum. Mice used in these studies were maintained according to the guidelines of the Animal Care and Use Committees of the University of North Dakota and Northwestern University, fully accredited by the American Association of Animal Laboratory Care. Of the 170 BC1 animals included in this study, 71 were male and 99 were female.
Induction of disease:
The BeAn 8386 strain of TMEV was used for disease induction in this study. After plaque purification and titer amplification by serial passage in BHK-21 cells, a working stock was prepared with a titer of 9.7 x 108 PFU/ml. At 7 weeks of age, the mice were anesthetized with methoxyflurane and inoculated in the right cerebral hemisphere with 2.9 x 106 PFU of virus. Control mice were injected with media or were mock infected with BHK lysate in the same manner. Both the control and the experimental animals were housed in the same environment.
Evaluation of phenotype:
Following inoculation, the animals were examined independently by two investigators for a period of 13 weeks. Severity of clinical signs was scored on the following basis: 0 for asymptomatic, 1 for moderate (swaying) gait abnormality, and 2 for severe (waddling) gait abnormality. Clinical signs have been previously shown to provide a good correlation with demyelination when compared with histological examination or testing of TMEV-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity responsiveness (![]()
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Genotyping and linkage analysis:
Genomic DNA was isolated from liver tissue. PCR-based genotyping using 199 polymorphic microsatellite markers was performed as previously described (![]()
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= 0.05) and suggestive (
= 0.10) experimentwise critical values were determined using the distribution of maximum LRT statistics from 1000 permutations of our data.
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
|---|
Gait abnormalities were seen in 120 of the 170 BC1 animals in the study. Significant differences in sex-specific susceptibility were not seen in parental BALB/cByJ, DBA/2J, or F1 hybrid mice using cohort sizes of 9 male and female mice (see Table 1). In our BC1 population, however, a greater number of males (56 of 71) than females were susceptible to TEMVD (64 of 99,
2 = 4.03, P = 0.045). ![]()
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Loci involved in TMEVD severity were identified using CIM on subpopulations consisting of males and females. In the male population (n = 71), CIM revealed significant loci (
= 0.05) on chromosomes 1, 5, and 15. A QTL on chromosome 1 (Tmevd6) near D1Mit170 at 19.5 cM accounted for 9.5% of the variation in the severity of the clinical signs associated with TMEVD severity (Fig 1, Table 2). (Mouse chromosomes are acrocentric; thus all centimorgan distances are relative to the centromere.) Interestingly, the negative additive effect (-0.26; see Table 2) indicated that the susceptibility allele was derived from the TMEVD-resistant BALB/cByJ. A QTL on chromosome 5 (Tmevd7) at 72 cM, near D5Mit30, accounted for 16.6% of the variation (Fig 1, Table 2) and increased severity at this locus was associated with the DBA/2J allele. On chromosome 15 at 4.7 cM near D15Mit12, a QTL (Tmevd8) accounted for 14.1% of the trait variation. Additionally, in male mice, suggestive linkage (
= 0.10) was found on chromosomes 15 and 16. A QTL on chromosome 15, at 22.2 cM near D15Mit5, accounted for 8.1% of the variation in the trait, while a locus on chromosome 16 near D16Mit50 at 53.5 cM accounted for 8.1% of the variation (Fig 1, Table 2). Interestingly, the QTL identified on chromosome 16 in males colocalizes with eae11, a locus controlling lesion severity and susceptibility to EAE in males (![]()
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Analysis of the female population (n = 99) revealed two QTL influencing the severity of disease symptoms. A significant QTL, Tmevd9, was found on chromosome 1 at 32.8 cM, near D1Mit76, and accounted for 7.6% of the variation (Table 2, Fig 2). This QTL colocalizes with Cd28 and Cd152 (Ctla4), important cell surface molecules in the control of T-cell activation. In contrast to Tmevd6, the DBA2/J allele at this locus decreased disease severity in females.
|
Additionally, suggestive linkage in females was seen on chromosome 1 at 19.5 cM (D1Mit170), accounting for 6.8% of the experimental variation. This QTL is at the same location as Tmevd6 identified in males. In contrast to males (additive effect = -0.26), the additive effect of Tmevd6 in females was 0.25, indicating that the DBA/2J allele increased severity in females while a BALB/cByJ allele increased severity in males. The presence of a QTL in the same interval of chromosome 1 in male and female populations with opposite additive effects suggests that Tmevd6 may contain two closely linked QTL with opposite effects in males and females. Alternatively, sex hormones may differentially regulate the same QTL in males and females. Interference of the sex-specific QTL at Tmevd6 on chromosome 1 most likely prevented their identification by classical interval mapping since they had effects in opposite directions (![]()
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In this study, we have shown that sex-specific QTL play a role in susceptibility to TMEVD with QTL on chromosomes 1, 5, 15, and 16 controlling disease severity in males, while two QTL on chromosome 1 influence severity in females. These sex-specific QTL were identified only when the experimental population was stratified by sex and analyzed using CIM. Similar sex-specific QTL have been identified in the genetic control of both clinical and histopathologic EAE, the other major animal model for MS (![]()
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The mechanisms underlying sex-specific QTL are unknown but may arise as a result of sex hormone regulation of the polymorphic genes underlying these QTL or interactions between mitochondrially or Y-chromosome-linked genes. The role of sex hormones in the sexual dimorphism observed in immune responsiveness as well as in immunopathologically based diseases has been well documented (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
2 Present address: Department of Physiology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205. ![]()
3 Present address: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Dr. Lei Liu and Keith Frazier of the Bioinformatics Unit of the W. M. Keck Center for Comparative and Functional Genomics at UIUC for supercomputing resources and to Mr. Paul Denton for his technical assistance. This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants NS36526 (to C.T.), AI41747 (to C.T.), and NS23349 (to R.W.M.), a fellowship in training grant T32 GM 07283 (to R.J.R.), and National Multiple Sclerosis Society grants RG2650, RG3129, PP0324 (to C.T.), and 2919A1/1 (to R.M.).
Manuscript received September 18, 2002; Accepted for publication November 26, 2002.
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