McGowan Kelly A, Fuchs Helmut, Hrabé de Angelis Martin, Barsh Gregory S
Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5323, USA.
J Invest Dermatol. 2007 Jan;127(1):60-4. doi: 10.1038/sj.jid.5700498. Epub 2006 Jul 20.
With the goal of increasing the number of genetic entry points for studying physiologic processes and human disease, large-scale, systematic, chemical mutagenesis projects in mice have been initiated in several different centers. We have been studying mouse mutants that exhibit dominantly inherited defects in either skin and/or hair color. Here, we describe a bright coat color mutant, Bright coat color 1 (Bcc1), which develops light-colored hair at 4 weeks of age, and when homozygous exhibits oral leukoplakia and blistering, and growth retardation. We identified a missense mutation in mutant animals that predicts an N154S amino-acid substitution in the 1A domain of Keratin 4 (encoded by the Krt2-4 gene), a region known to be mutated in human patients with white sponge nevus (WSN). Bcc1 recapitulates the gross pathologic, histologic, and genetic aspects of the human disorder, WSN.