Characterization of Ws mutant allele of rats: a 12-base deletion in tyrosine kinase domain of c-kit gene

Tohru Tsujimura(The University of Osaka), Seiichi Hirota(The University of Osaka), Shogo Nomura(The University of Osaka), Y. Niwa(The University of Osaka), MASARU YAMAZAKI(The University of Osaka), T. Tono(The University of Osaka), Eiichi Morii(The University of Osaka), HM Kim(The University of Osaka), Kazuhiro Kondo(The University of Osaka), Yoshitake Nishimune(The University of Osaka)
Blood
October 15, 1991
Cited by 149

Abstract

Homozygous mutant rats at the newly found white spotting (Ws) locus were anemic and deficient in mast cells and melanocytes. Because the phenotype of Ws/Ws rats resembled the phenotype of mice possessing a double-gene dose of mutant alleles at the W locus and because the c-kit gene was mapped at the W locus of mice, we characterized the c-kit gene of Ws/Ws rats. The authentic sequence of the rat c-kit cDNA was determined by using a cDNA library prepared from the hippocampus of Sprague-Dawley rats. The c-kit cDNA of Ws/Ws and normal (+/+) control rats was obtained by reverse transcriptase modification of the polymerase chain reaction. When compared with the authentic sequence, a deletion of 12 bases was found in the c-kit cDNA of Ws/Ws rats. This change was shown to be a result of the deletion of the genomic DNA. Four amino acids encoded by the deleted 12 bases (ie, Val-Lys-Gly-Asn) were located at two amino acids downstream from the tyrosine autophosphorylation site in the c-kit kinase and were conserved not only in mouse and human c-kit kinases but also in mouse and human c-fms kinases (ie, receptors of colony-stimulating factor-1). Taken together, the Ws/Ws rat is the first characterized mutant of the c-kit gene in an animal species other than the mouse.


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