RRC ID 83218
Author Yokoi N, Adachi N, Hirokoji T, Nakano K, Yoshihara M, Shigenaka S, Urakawa R, Taniguchi Y, Yoshida Y, Yokose S, Suyama M, Okamura T.
Title Comparative transcriptome and mutation analyses of the pancreatic islets of a rat model of obese type 2 diabetes identifies a frequently distributed nonsense mutation in the lipocalin 2 gene.
Journal DNA Res
Abstract Type 2 diabetes is a multifactorial disease caused by insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells, but the precise mechanisms remain to be elucidated. To identify primary genetic factors of type 2 diabetes in a rat model, we performed comparative transcriptome and mutation analyses of the pancreatic islets between the obese Zucker fatty rat and the Zucker fatty rat-derived type 2 diabetes model ZFDM rat. Among differentially expressed genes irrespective of obesity and glucose intolerance states, we identified a nonsense mutation, c.409C>T (p.Gln137X), in the lipocalin 2 (Lcn2) gene which encodes a secreted protein called neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, a well-known biomarker for inflammation. We examined the relevance of the Lcn2 mutation with T2D in the ZFDM rat by using genome editing and genetic linkage analysis and confirmed that the Lcn2 mutation exhibits no significant association with the onset of T2D. Interestingly, we found that the Lcn2 mutation is distributed widely in rat species, such as commonly used DA and F344 strains. Our data indicate that several rat strains would serve as Lcn2 deficient models, contributing to elucidate pathophysiological roles of Lcn2 in a wide variety of phenotypes.
Published 2025-2-26
DOI 10.1093/dnares/dsaf004
PII 8042864
PMID 40036227
PMC PMC11976058
MeSH Animals Codon, Nonsense* Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2* / genetics Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2* / metabolism Disease Models, Animal Islets of Langerhans* / metabolism Lipocalin-2* / genetics Lipocalin-2* / metabolism Male Obesity* / genetics Rats Rats, Zucker Transcriptome*
IF 4.009
Resource
Rats The genome DNA of 157 inbred rat strains (S13 Table) were provided by the National Bioresource Project-Rat (NBRP-Rat), Kyoto University (Kyoto, Japan).