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DESC-2426; No. of Pages 24 Journal of Dermatological Science xxx (2012) xxx–xxx
Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect
Journal of Dermatological Science journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/jds
Invited Review Article
Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update Motonobu Nakamura a,*, Marlon R. Schneider b, Ruth Schmidt-Ullrich c, Ralf Paus d,e a
Department of Dermatology, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, Japan Institute of Molecular Animal Breeding and Biotechnology, Gene Center, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany c Max-Delbru¨ck-Center, Berlin, Germany d Department of Dermatology, University of Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany e Institute of Inflammation and Repair, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK b
A R T I C L E I N F O
A B S T R A C T
Article history: Received 30 August 2012 Received in revised form 2 October 2012 Accepted 4 October 2012
Human hair disorders comprise a number of different types of alopecia, atrichia, hypotrichosis, distinct hair shaft disorders as well as hirsutism and hypertrichosis. Their causes vary from genodermatoses (e.g. hypotrichoses) via immunological disorders (e.g. alopecia areata, autoimmune cicatrical alopecias) to hormone-dependent abnormalities (e.g. androgenetic alopecia). A large number of spontaneous mouse mutants and genetically engineered mice develop abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or hair shaft formation, whose analysis has proven invaluable to define the molecular regulation of hair growth, ranging from hair follicle development, and cycling to hair shaft formation and stem cell biology. Also, the accumulating reports on hair phenotypes of mouse strains provide important pointers to better understand the molecular mechanisms underlying human hair growth disorders. Since numerous new mouse mutants with a hair phenotype have been reported since the publication of our earlier review on this matter a decade ago, we present here an updated, tabulated mini-review. The updated annotated tables list a wide selection of mouse mutants with hair growth abnormalities, classified into four categories: Mutations that affect hair follicle (1) morphogenesis, (2) cycling, (3) structure, and (4) mutations that induce extrafollicular events (for example immune system defects) resulting in secondary hair growth abnormalities. This synthesis is intended to provide a useful source of reference when studying the molecular controls of hair follicle growth and differentiation, and whenever the hair phenotypes of a newly generated mouse mutant need to be compared with existing ones. ß 2012 Japanese Society for Investigative Dermatology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Hair follicle morphogenesis Hair cycle Knockout Mouse Transgenic
Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Analysis of hair follicle morphogenesis and cycling: the importance of professionally executed, quantitative histomorphometry Mouse models with spontaneous or randomly induced mutations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transgenic mice and choice of promoters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Targeted mutagenesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Selection and organisation of the presented mouse mutant tables. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Published hair phenotype descriptions: cautionary comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Abbreviations: ENU, ethyl-nitrosourea induced chemical mutagenesis; GEMs, genetically engineered mice; HF, hair follicle; Rad, radiation induced; S, spontaneous mutation; Tg, transgenic; TGF, transforming growth factor; Tm, targeted mutation. * Corresponding author at: Department of Dermatology, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, 1-1 Iseigaoka, Yahatanishi-ku, Kitakyushu 807-8555, Japan. Tel.: +81 93 691 7445; fax: +81 93 691 0907. E-mail address:
[email protected] (M. Nakamura). 0923-1811/$36.00 ß 2012 Japanese Society for Investigative Dermatology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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1. Introduction Over the past two decades, the molecular controls that drive hair follicle (HF) development and cycling have become one of the most intensively investigated and productive areas of skin research. Here, fundamentally important controls that range from mechanisms of organ induction and morphogenesis via principles of stem cell and pigmentation biology, topobiology, cell commitment, differentiation, and programmed death to complex cell-cell and tissue interactions can be studied exemplarily in a model miniorgan [1,2]. As such, the study of hair growth phenomena and of mutations associated with hair phenotype changes has permitted novel insights into general biological principles that extend far beyond skin and hair research. Moreover, the study of hair phenotypes in spontaneous mouse mutants or genetically engineered mice (GEM) with precisely defined lack-of-function or gain-of-function mutations has provided invaluable mechanistic insights into the – as yet often unknown or ill-understood – causes of human hair growth disorders. The range from genodermatoses (e.g. papular atrichia, monilithrex, hypotrichosis simplex) via immunological disorders (e.g. alopecia areata, autoimmune cicatrical alopecias) to hormone-dependent abnormalities (e.g. androgenetic alopecia). While caution is advised to avoid oversimplistic equations between animal models and human hair disease, mutant mice certainly offer excellent clues to specific disease mechanisms, which can be followed-up in the human system. Mouse mutants with a hair phenotype are therefore an invaluable tool for improving our often very limited understanding of human hair pathology, and are likely to generate important new insights into the molecular basis of different types of alopecia, atrichia, hypotrichosis, hair shaft disorders, hirsutism and hypertrichosis. The current mini-review is presented mainly in the form of annotated tables, and constitutes an update of earlier tabulated review that we had published more than a decade ago [3]. Numerous novel mouse mutants with a hair phenotype have been published since, justifying an extensive up-date. The present, updated tables list a wide selection of mouse mutants with hair growth abnormalities, while mutants in which the primary phenotype abnormalities lie in hair pigmentation or in the sebaceous gland were omitted. The mouse mutants with a hair phenotype presented here have been classified into four categories: mutations that affect HF (1) morphogenesis, (2) cycling, (3) structure, and (4) mutations that induce extrafollicular events, for example immune system defects, resulting in secondary hair growth abnormalities. These updated tables also should facilitate comparisons between the hair phenotype of a newly generated mouse mutant with existing ones. 2. Analysis of hair follicle morphogenesis and cycling: the importance of professionally executed, quantitative histomorphometry HF morphogenesis is focally initiated via an inductive signaling exchange between epidermal keratinocytes which eventually adopt a HF fate, and a specialized population of dermal fibroblasts, which at first form the dermal condensate and at later stages the follicular dermal papilla (DP) [1]. This bi-directional epithelialmesenchymal interaction is governed by a tightly controlled balance between numerous growth stimulators and inhibitors, which drive the developing HF through defined, genetically programmed series of morphogenetic stages that culminate in the formation of a fiber-producing mini-organ [2]. Once HF morphogenesis is completed, the HF continuously undergoes regular cycles of regeneration coupled with an extremely high proliferation and protein synthesis activity
(anagen), followed by an apoptosis-driven organ involution (catagen) and a relative resting phase (telogen) [1,2]. Similar to HF development, HF cycling is governed by signaling interactions between the dermal papilla cells and HF keratinocytes. Numerous soluble factors, transcription factors and adhesion molecules play indispensable roles in these signaling interactions. While, in contrast to human HFs, hair shaft shedding (exogen) in mice is an actively regulated process, the old hair shafts from preceding cycles are often retained by healthy murine HFs, at least during the first few cycles [4,5]. Therefore in mice even substantial abnormalities of HF cycling are not necessarily associated with substantial hair loss (alopecia), and can easily be missed, if quantitative hair cycle histomorphometry is not performed (see below). Using comprehensive guides for recognition and classification of distinct stages of murine HF morphogenesis [6] and hair cycling [7], it has become easier to compare mutant with control mice. However, four routine mistakes frequently obstruct a professional hair phenotype analysis of mutant mice: 1) Investigators tend to erroneously equate HF morphogenesis with what they consider to represent the ‘‘first hair cycle’’. These investigators ignore that HF morphogenesis in mice continues well into the first week of postnatal life and is only terminated by the induction of HF cycling when the HF first enters catagen between P17 and P19. As HFs which are still undergoing development are biologically distinct entities from mature, cycling HFs, this can lead to erroneous assumptions and illfounded hypotheses. Thus, postnatal HF morphogenesis and HF cycling must be carefully distinguished, and should be analyzed separately (for details, see Sections 5–7). 2) Hair growth phenotype analysis is often performed only on the basis of very limited qualitative comparisons between agematched mutant and wild type mice. This tends to both overinterpret and overlook phenotypic abnormalities. Therefore, a fully quantitative assessment of HF morphogenesis and cycling, which can be complemented with a ‘‘hair morphogenesis score’’ (HMS) and a ‘‘hair cycle score’’ (HCS), is mandatory for a professional hair phenotype analysis (details, Sections 5–7). 3) Murine HFs come in several important anatomical varieties with distinct structural characteristics: vibrissae HFs, and guard HFs (syn. Tylotrich HFs), auchenne, awl and zigzag pelage HFs [4]. The development of these functionally and structurally distinct HF subpopulations is induced at different time points of fetal, perinatal, and/or postnatal life, and their molecular controls can differ substantially. Thus indiscriminately lumping together these distinct HF subpopulations during hair phenotype analysis is both inaccurate and inappropriate. This obscures important molecular pathobiology clues that a separate analysis of individual HF sub-types would have revealed otherwise. 4) Distinct pelage HF subpopulations begin to develop in waves in defined skin regions, and then go on to cycle in wellsynchronized waves, which finally break-up into isolated cycling domains that subsequently become ever-more heterogeneous with progressing age of the mouse. Therefore, it is absolutely critical for professional hair phenotype analyses to not only carefully age-match mutant mice with WT controls – ideally gender-matched littermates – but also to only compare standardized identical reference areas of pelage hair. If these frequent mistakes are avoided, the hair phenotype analyses of loss-of-function and gain-of-function mice will further deepen our understanding of the functional roles of the mutated proteins in skin and hair biology, and will offer invaluable pointers to mechanisms underlying comparable human hair diseases.
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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3. Mouse models with spontaneous or randomly induced mutations Mouse models occupy a preeminent position in biomedical research. The reasons include (1) similarities between mice and humans in development, body plan, physiology and diseases; (2) the small size of mice and their large litters facilitating the maintenance of a large number of individuals; (3) over 99% of human genes have homologues in the mouse genome; (4) availability of techniques to alter gene expression efficiently and precisely. The analysis of mice carrying genetic mutations also has greatly contributed to the advance of dermatological research [4]. Initially, investigators had to rely exclusively on spontaneous mutations or mutations induced randomly by chemical or physical agents, and dozens of spontaneous mutant lines with a skin phenotype are still being used for a variety of skin research studies [4]. Often, the genetic defect underlying the spontaneous mutation was unraveled only decades after the initial description of the mouse line by gene mapping, sequencing and positional cloning techniques, or by targeted mutagenesis of the cognate gene (see below). Examples include nude mice (Foxn1 mutation), hairless mice (Hr mutation), angora mice (fibroblast growth factor 5 mutation), waved-1 and waved-2 mutant lines, recognized by their wavy hairs, (transforming growth factor-a and epidermal growth factor receptor mutation, respectively), or tabby, downless and crinkled mice (tumor necrosis factor receptor family members EdaA1, Edar and Edaradd mutations, respectively) [8–12]. Artificially induced mutations in the mouse genome allow to generate chromosomal aberrations, point mutations, deletions or insertions, depending on the method employed. Chemically induced mutations have experienced a renaissance in the form of large scale, often multi-national mutagenesis programs [13,14]. In most cases, N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU), a powerful mutagen that acts predominantly on premeiotic spermatogonia, is used. The phenotype screening of large numbers of ENU-mutated mice by specialized labs guarantees the accurate characterization of a great number of mutants. Both spontaneous and ENU-induced mutations are commonly classified as ‘‘forward genetics’’ or ‘‘phenotype-driven’’ approaches, because the mutations are induced at random, the new mutants are identified by phenotype screens, and the altered genes are only identified subsequently. 4. Transgenic mice and choice of promoters With the availability of recombinant DNA technology in the 1970s, genotype-driven approaches (also known as ‘‘reverse genetics’’) became possible. The feasibility of genome sequencing and identification of an increasing number of genes and their protein products called for their functional analysis in the organism or a in given tissue. Thus, soon after the introduction of transgenic mouse technology in the early 1980s [15], researchers increasingly concentrated on the development of methods allowing tissue-specific expression of diverse soluble factors, their receptors, transcription factors, and enzymes. The expression of keratin (K) gene pairs, which encode the major structural proteins of mammalian skin epithelium [16,17], is tightly regulated at the transcription level in keratinocytes, rendering keratins a convenient and unrivaled set of markers for the study of epithelial biology. Certain keratin promoters were also successfully exploited for directing the expression of transgenes to specific epithelial compartments, including the HF [18]. The K14 [19] and K5 [20] regulatory sequences are the most commonly employed promoters to drive transgene expression in the basal layer of the epidermis and the outer root sheath of the HF, while the K1 [21] and K10 [22] promoters target terminally differentiated epidermal keratinocytes. More recently, the K15 promoter was
3
shown to be a particularly useful tool for targeting HF epithelial stem cells [23,24]. Additional promoters are employed in hair research to achieve cell type-specific expression of transgenes include the regulatory sequences of involucrin [25,26], versican [27], and msx2 [28] genes. Since most of the commonly employed promoters are already active during embryonic development and may therefore interfere with experiments focusing on hair cycling and homeostasis in adult epidermis, a major advance in transgenic technology was the introduction of inducible expression systems. The most popular approach is the Tet-Off or Tet-On expression system, in which the expression of the transgene depends on the activity of an inducible transcriptional activator, the tetracycline transactivator (tTA or rtTA) [29]. In both systems, the activity of tTA/rtTA and, thus, expression of the transgene can be quantitatively and reversibly regulated by exposing the animals to varying concentrations of tetracycline or, most commonly, its derivate doxycycline in drinking water or food pellets [30,31]. Hair-specific expression of Cre under the control of tTA/rtTA is achieved most commonly by employing the K5 [32] and K14 [33–35] regulatory regions [reviewed in 18]. 5. Targeted mutagenesis In contrast to the random integration of constructs in transgenic technology, gene targeting by homologous recombination permits the modification of specific endogenous sequences [36]. The gene of interest can be completely inactivated, resulting in the constitutive loss of the equivalent protein (‘‘knock-out’’). Another possibility is the replacement of the endogenous gene with a similar sequence carrying a subtle mutation, or with an exogenous coding sequence to take advantage of the regulatory promoter elements of the locus (‘‘knock-in’’). The latter method is also frequently used to introduce reporter genes, such as different fluorescent proteins or b-galactosidase, into a particular gene locus for detecting expression patterns and for lineage tracing studies [18]. A more accurate analysis of gene function and regulation is achieved by conditional mutagenesis, a technique allowing tissuespecific and time-controlled modification of gene product activity. In the P1 bacteriophage-derived Cre-loxP system, the enzyme Cre (creates recombination) recombinase recognizes a 34 bp-long sequence called loxP (locus of crossover in P1). Cre excises DNA segments flanked by two loxP sites in the same orientation, leaving a single loxP site behind. This property is exploited in a binary mutant approach, where mice expressing Cre are crossed to mice carrying gene segments flanked by two loxP sites (‘‘floxed’’). The K5 [37,38] and K14 [39] promoters are the most commonly employed regulatory regions to direct expression of Cre in hair research [reviewed in 18]. In addition to the transgenic approach, some Cre expressing lines such as K14-Cre [40] and Krox20-Cre [41] have also been generated with a knock-in approach. Apart from specifically knocking out a gene in a particular tissue by the Cre-loxP system, temporal control can be achieved by the expression of Cre recombinase fused to a mutated ligand-binding domain of the estrogen receptor that binds tamoxifen, but not estrogen. In this case, Cre activity is only present after administration of the estrogen agonist tamoxifen [42]. Again, hair-specific expression of Cre is achieved most commonly by either employing the K5 [43] or K14 [44] regulatory regions [reviewed in 18]. Initially, gene-targeted mouse models were laborious and timeconsuming products. However, the availability of the human and mouse genome sequences and many technical advances contributed to the simplification and automatization of the procedure. It is, thus, noteworthy to mention the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-based high-throughput VelociGene system, which allows precise genetic alteration independently of the size of the desired
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 1 Mouse mutants with reported hair follicle morphogenesis abnormalities. Abbreviations: Ch, chromosome; IRS, inner rooth sheath; ORS, outer rooth sheath; Tm, targeted mutation; Tg, transgenic; S, spontaneous; Rad, radiation induced; UN, unknown. Mutant name Soluble factors and receptors Activin A receptor, type 1
Symbol
Ch
Acvr1
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tg
S1
EdaTa6J, EdaTa, EdaTac
X
S
EdaTa6J Tnfrsf19 (Troy)
X 14
S Tm
Edardl3J
10
S
At P1, retardation of HF morphogenesis. Identical phenotype to TGFa KO mice (see below): Wavy hair and curly vibrissae due to HF orientation and alignment problems. At P1, retardation of HF morphogenesis. Lack of IRS and hair shaft formation: BMP signaling required for hair shaft and IRS differentiation. Accelerated HF morphogenesis. Impairment of IRS differentiation. No or abnormal hair shafts. Most of the hairs fail to pierce the epidermal surface. At P8, wavy hairs, lack of IRS and hair shafts. No IRS or hair shaft differentiation. Complete absence of HF development Hair growth from corneal epithelium. Continuous placode formation between E14 and birth. Longer and wavy hairs with abnormal ultrastructure. No zigazag hairs, only guard and awl hairs. Bald patch behind the ears and no hair on the tail. Mice only develop awl hairs. Lack of guard hair development. Lack of formation of zigzag hair ultrastructure. Zigazgs are transformed in awl hairs. Guard hair development can be restored by transgenic overexpression of Eda-A1 (K14Eda-A1), but not zigzag hair formation. Guard HF placode development initiated, but no down-growth. Double mutant with tabby phenotype, but also focal alopecia on head and retarded secondary HF development. Identical to tabby mice.
10
S
Identical to tabby mice.
S19
10 10
S Tg Tg
Identical to tabby mice. Identical to tabby mice. 40% increase in HF placode density. Retarded HF development at P4 Short and waved hairs and curly whiskers. Thinning or loss of the inner and outer root sheath in 3 to 4 weeks old mouse. Degeneration and destruction of HFs. Delay of HF development. At P5, disoriented and irregularly placed HFs. Premature separation of hair shaft from IRS. Premature keratinization of IRS. At P7, no hair outgrowth. Short curly vibrissae. Disoriented HFs. Few hairs grow through the epidermis.
S20 S21 S22
Amphiregulin/Epidermal growth factor/ Transforming growth factor a triple knockouts
Aregtm1Dle Egftm1Dle Tgfatm1Unc
Betacellulin
Tg(CBA-Btc)2Ewo
Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A, epidermal Tm
Bmpr1afl/fl K14-Cre
14
Tm
Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A, skin Tm
Bmpr1aflox/ Emx1Cre/+
14
Tm
Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A, epidermal Tm Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A, epidermal Tm Dickkopf 1
Bmpr1atm2Bhr Tg(KRT14-cre)40Smr Bmpr1atm2Bhr KRT14-cre K14-Dkk1 K5rtTA;tetO-Cre;Dkk1 Dkk2tm1Lmgd
14
Tm
14
Tm
Dickkopf 2 Ectodysplasin-A1, epidermal over-expression
Ectodysplasin-A1
Tabby 6 Jackson, tabby and tabby c
Ectodysplasin-A receptor Ectodysplasin-A receptor Ectodysplasin-A receptor Ectodysplasin-A receptor, epidermal over-expression Epidermal growth factor Epidermal growth factor receptor ERBB1, dominant negative
Downless 3 Jackson Sleek Downless
Dlslk
Edar , Transposon induced. Edardl EdarTg(OVE1B)Ove K14:LMP1-Edar
Tm Tm Tm
Tg
Tg 3
Tm Tg
mEda-A1, K14-Eda-A1, Ivl-Eda-A1
Ectodysplasin-A1 and Tumor necrosis facor receptor superfamily, member 19 Ectodysplasin-A receptor
5 3 6
CMV-Egf Tg(EGFR)0Jlj
Tg Tg
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Egfrtm1Mag
11
Tm
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Egfrtm1Rdk
11
Tm
S2
S3 S4
S5
S6 S7 S8–9 S10 S11–13
S14–17
S18
S23 S24
S25
S26
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 1 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol tm1Wag
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
11
Tm
At birth, less differentiated HFs. At birth, vibrissae are absent or rudimentary stubs. Delay of HF development. Short and sparse hairs. At 3 months, degenerated HFs. Progressive hair loss. A wavy coat in 3-week-old animals that becomes less apparent with age Wavy hair and curly vibrissae. Wavy, disoriented hairs. Curly vibressae. Wavy hair and curly vibrissae. Ptpn11 heterozygous background results in no or few poorly developed and disordered HFs and little hair outgrowth. Majority of the HFs replaced by bizzare hyperproliferative intradermal squamous invaginations. Patchy hair growth, follicular hyperplasia Alopecia, follicular hyperplasia
S27
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Egfr
Epidermal growth factor receptor, ‘‘humanized’’ mice; hypomorphic receptor
Egfrtm2(EGFR)Wag
11
Tm
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Dark skin 5
EgfrDsk5
11
ENU
Epidermal growth factor receptor Epidermal growth factor receptor
Waved 5 Velvet
Egfrwa5 EgfrVel
11 11
ENU ENU
Epidermal growth factor receptor Epidermal growth factor receptor, ‘‘humanized’’ mice; hypomorphic receptor. Protein tyrosine phosphatase, non-receptor type 11
Waved 2 Waved 2
Egfrwa2 Egfrwa2 Ptpn11tm1Pau
11 11 5
S S Tm
Avian erythroblastosis oncogene B2 (neu; activated ERBB2)
Tg(erbb2*)1Jek
Tg
Avian erythroblastosis oncogene B2 (neu; activated ERBB2) Avian erythroblastosis oncogene B2 (neu; activated ERBB2) Fibroblast growth factor 7 (Keratinocyte growth facor) Fibroblast gowth factor 7 (keratinocyte growth factor)
Tg(K5-erbb2*)
Tg
Tg(K5-erbb2*)
Tg
FGF7tm1Efu
2
Tm Tg
Tg(FGF7)2Efu
Fibroblast gowth factor 10
Fgf10tm1Ska
13
Tm
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2
Fgfr2tm2.1Dsn Fgfr2tm3Dsn
7 7
Tm Tm
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2
Fgfr2tm1Cxd
7
Tm
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (dominant negative) Follistatin
Tg(FGFR2)1Saw
Follistatin
Tg(Fst)4Zuk
Frizzled 6 Human glucocorticoid receptor DNA binding factor 1 Hepatocyte growth factor Insulin-like growth factor Insulin-like growth factor Insulin-like growth factor
Fzd6tm1Nat Grlf1
Insulin-like growth factor I receptor
Igf1rtm1Arge
Insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3
Igfbp3
Inhibin bA (Activin bA)
Inhbatm1Zuk
13
Tm
Inhibin bA (Activin bA)
Inhba
13
Tm
Mitten
Inhba Lrp4mitt
2
Tg ENU
Mitaine
Lrp4mta
2
ENU
Inhibin bA (Activin bA) Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4 Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4
tm1Zuk
Fst
Tg UN
Tm
Tg 15
Tg(Hgf)1Paus Tg(IGF1)1Hys Tg(IGF1)Jdg IGF1
Tm Tg Tg Tg Tg Tg
7
Tm
Tg
Perturbation in the direction of the hairs. Marked suppression of HF morphogenesis.Sparse or no whiskers. Decreased number of hair follicles. Elongation of hair follicles rarely seen. Thin hairs. Disorganized HFs. At E13.5 and E14.5, no placode formation. Reduced HFs. Retarded HF development. No placode formation at E14.5. Decreased hair density after skin transplantation to wildtype recipients. 60–80% reduction in the number of HFs. Thin and inappropariately oriented vibrissae. Retardation of HF development. Irregular fur. No obvious cause found histologically. HFs in divergent orientation. Expression in embryos results in reduced HFs. Accelerated HF development. Accelerated vibrissae growth Earlier HF development. Earlier HF development. 10% longer awl hairs and 20% longer guard hairs compared to the wild-type. Marked decrease in the absolute number of HFs. Smaller HFs. Slight delay in HF development. Reduced size of HFs. Less dense and rough appearance of hairs. Lack of vibrissae (pelage HFs apparently normal). Inhibin ba is replaced with Inhibinbb. Rough appearance of hairs. Slower hair growth. Retardation of HF development. Not specified abnormal HFs and vibrissae. Not specified abnormal HFs and vibrissae.
S28
S29
S30 S31 S32–33 S34
S35–36
S37 S38 S39 S40
S41
S42 S43
S44
S45 S46–47
S48 S49 S50 S51 S52 S53 S54
S55
S56
S57 S58
S47 S59
S59
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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6 Table 1 (Continued )
Mutant name Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 6 Nerve growth factor Nerve growth factor, epidermal over-expression Nerve growth factor, transgenic expression of antibodies against NGF under the CMV promoter Nerve growth factor receptor (p75) (low affinity neurotrophin receptor)
Crooked
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Cd
Lrp6
6
S
Short and bristle-like hairs.
S60
NGFtm1Gne K14-NGF
3
Tm Tg
Retarded HF development. Acceleration of HF morphogenesis. Retardation of HF development.
S61 S62
Acceleration of HF morphogenesis. Prominant upregulation of Fgfr2 in both follicular dermal papilla and epithelium. Reduced number of HFs; no secondary HF development. Increased awl-like hairs due to conversion of zigzag and auchene into awl hairs. Enlarged hair bulbs of anagen HFs. Increased hair density. Increased numbers of auchene and awl hairs. At P7, hairless. Hyperplastic and disoriented HFs. Only zigzag hairs were present. At P52, HFs were filled with sebocytes. Retarded HF development.
S64
Tg(CMV-VH-aD11), Tg(CMV-VK-aD11)
Tg
Ngfrtm1Jae
11
Tm
Noggin
Nogtm1Amc
11
Tm
Noggin, epidermal over-expression
Nog, K5-Noggin
Tg
Noggin, epidermal over-expression
Nog, K14-Noggin
Tg
Neuregulin 3
Nrg3
Tg
Neurotrophic tyrosine kinase receptor, type 3 (TrkC) Neurotrophin 3
Ntrk3tm1Bbd
Neurotrophin 3
tm1Jae
Ntf3 Ntf3tm2Jae Tg(Ntf3)1Kma
7
Tm
6
Tm Tg
Nuclear receptor subfamily 3, group C, member 1
Nr3c1
Platelet derived growth factor a
Pdgfatm1Cbet
Peroxisome proliferator activatorreceptor a Peroxisome proliferator activator receptor d Parathyroid hormone-like peptide
Tg(tetO-PPARA)1Gonz
Parathyroid hormone-like peptide Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2) Sonic hedgehog homolog, transgenic over-expression under the human keratin 1 promoter
Tg(PTHLH)7Wmp Msx2tm1Rilm HK1-Shh
13
Sonic hedgehog homolog
Shhtm1Amc
5
Tm
Sonic hedgehog homolog Smoothened homolog (Drosophila)
Shhtm1Chg Smo
5
Tm Tg
Smoothened homolog (Drosophila): epidermal expression of the oncogene M2SMO together with transgenic epidermal Dickkopf homolog 1 expression
K5-M2SMO K5-Dkk1
tm1Wwah
Ppard
Tg
5
Tm Tg
17
Tg(PTHLH)7Wmp
Tm Tg
Tg Tm Tg
Tg
Retarded HF development in heterozygotes. Accelerated HF development and increased number of HFs. Reduction in the number of HFs (50%). Atrophic HFs. HFs are replaced by hypertrophic sebaceous glands. Misshapen HFs, smaller dermal papillae, thinner hairs. Reduction in the number of HFs. Thin hairs. At P4, retarded HF development. Ventral hairlessness (almost complete absence of HFs). Short and thin hairs on the dorsum. A delay of hair follicle morphogenesis. Recovery of HF induction in ventral skin. Suppression in HF development between E14 and E19: Total lack of guard, awl, and auchene hairs. Only develop (90%) zigzag hairs. Alopecia on the head. Total arrest of HF development at peg stage. Retarded HF development. Rudimentary DP. Absence of IRS development. No HF formation in skin grafts. Identical to Shhtm1Amc. Overexpression of human SMO with a mutation resulted in ectopic epithelial buds and follicular hamartoma formation. Ectopic epithelial HF bud formation caused by constitutive SHH activity in K5M2SMO mice is blocked by epidermal WNT activity inhibition (K5-Dkk1).
S63
S65 S66
S67
S68
S69 S70 S70 S71
S72 S73 S74 S75
S76 S77
S78
S79 S80
S80
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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7
Table 1 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol tm1Amc
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tm
Mice have decreased epithelial and increased mesenchymal SHH signaling. At P1, abnormal epithelial invagination. At 2–3 months of age, huge HFs. De novo HFs from ORS and interfollicular epithelium. Abnormal hair shaft and IRS formation. Cyst formation. Eventual depletion of HF stem cell niche. Reduced HFs at E17.5 and P0. Retarded HF morphogenesis at P0 and P3. Pronounced waviness of the vibrissae and fur. Abnormal curvature and disorientation of the HFs. Disheveled hairs pointing in different directions in different angles. Additional bends in hair shafts. Wavy hair and curly vibrissae due to disorganization of HFs. Flattened and distorted HFs at the dermal-subdermal border. Reduction in the number of HFs. 50% reduction in the number of HFs on day E18.5. Delay in HF morphogenesis. Retarded hair growth. Shorter HFs and distorted at the base of the muscle layer.
S81
Smoothened homolog (Drosophila)
Smo Tg(KRT-14-cre)1Amc
6
Smoothened homolog (Drosophila)
Smotm2Amc Tg(Prrx1-cre)1Cjt/J
6
Transforming growth factor a
Tgfatm1Ard
6
Tm
Transforming growth factor a
Tgfatm1Unc
6
Tm
Tgfawa1
6
S
Transforming growth factor a
Tg(Tgfa)1Efu
6
Tg
Transforming growth factor b1
Tg(Tgfb1)1Der
7
Tg
Transforming growth factor b2
Tgfb2tm1Doe
1
Tm
Tumor necrosis factor, epidermal over-expression
Tnf, K14-TNF
Transforming growth factor a
Transcription factors Activating transcription factor 3
Waved 1
Tg
Tg(KRT5-ATF3)1Mcld
1
Tg
Activating transcription factor 4
Atf4tm1Tow
15
Tm
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1. Overexpression of stabilized b-catenin.
Ctnnb1(Ex3)fl
9
Tm
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1. Overexpression of stabilized b-catenin.
Ctnnb1(Ex3)fl
9
Tm
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1. Epidermal Tm
Ctnnb1tm4Wbm, Krt14tm1(cre)Wbm
9
Tm
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1. Epidermal Tm Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1, ventral dermis Tm Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1, dermal Tm Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1
Ctnnb1fl/fl, KRT14-Cre line 43 Ctnnb1
9
Tm
9
Tm
Ctnnb1D/fl, En1Cre
9
Tm
(Ex3)fl
9
Tm
Ctnnb1 HoxB6CreER
At P17, multiple layers of hyperplastic ORS cells. Large aberrantly shaped HFs. Delay of hair growth. By one week of age, homozygous mice have only fine sparse haris. Many have ruffled hairs. Placode-like structures already at E12.5. At E14, high placode density. At E17, the downgrowth of HF placode ceases. Irregulary-spaced placodes. Impaired hair shaft formation. Premature placode development already at E12.5. Entire epidermis adopts HF fate, even on foot pads. At E14.5, failure of HF invagination into the dermis. Ectopic HFs also in adults when over-expressed in adult ectoderm. Lack of hair shaft formation. At P8, patches of hairless skin. Reduced zigzags. At P20, retracting epithelial hair shafts become separated from the dermal papillae. Hair loss progressed after P16. Total hair loss at P30. Late induction of K14-Cre. Complete absence of HF development. At E14.5, absence of ventral HFs. Complete absence of HF development. Forced expression of b-catenin in dermal fibroblasts leads to the increase in HF placode size and number.
S82
S83
S84
S85–86 S87 S88 S89
S90
S91
S92
S93
S94
S95
S9 S96 S97 S97
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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8 Table 1 (Continued )
Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tg
High amounts of abnormal ectopic hair follicles observed from P18 onwards. Hair-germlike structures progress to epithelioid cysts, tumors resembling trichofolliculomas or pilomatricomas. Curly vibrissae and wavy hairs. HFs are rooted more deeply and are mildly disorganized. HFs appeared greater in number and somewhat disorganized. At 1 week after birth, homozygotes started to lose hairs. Twisted, bifurcated, circle, and corkscrew hairs with nodules or longitudinal grooving. Disoriented HFs. At P9 no apparent medulla.
S98
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1. Epidermal N-terminally truncated b catenin expression
Tg(CTNNB1)1Efu: K14-DN87bcat
Cut-like homeobox 1
Cux1tm2Ejn
5
Tm
Cut-like homeobox 1
Cux1tm1Rhsc
5
Tm
Cut-like homeobox 1
Cux1tm1Mbu
5
Tm
Distal-less homeobox 3 Epidermal Tm
Dlx3tm2Mso Tg(KRT14-cre)Smr Tg(KRT5-E2F1)1Dgj
11
Tm
2
Tg
E26 avian leukemia oncogene 2,30 domain
Ets2tm1Rgo
16
Tm
Forkhead box E1 (thyroid transcription factor 2)
Foxe1tm1Rdl
4
Tm
GATA binding protein 3 Epidermal Tm
Gata3tm3Gsv Tg(KRT14-cre)8Brn Gli2tm1Alj, K5-Gli2, K5-DNGli2
2
Tm
1
Tm and Tg
Interferon regulatory factor 6
Irf6tm1Mjd
1
Tm
Lymphoid enhancer binding factor-1 (Lef-1)
Lef1tm1Rug
3
Tm
Lymphoid enhancer binding factor-1 LIM homeobox protein 2 Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2)
Tg(LEF1)1Efu
3
Tg
Lhx2tm1Dra Msx2tm1Rilm
2 13
Tm Tm
Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2)
Tg(Msx2)1Rem
Tg
Nuclear factor of kappa light chain gene enhancer in B-cells (NF-kB)
Ctnnb1tm1(Nfkbia)Rsu, IkBaDN
Tm
E2F transcription factor 1. Epidermal over-expression of E2F1
GLI-Kruppel family number 2 (Gli2): Gli2 Tm, epidermal Gli2 over-expression and epidermal hyper-active Gli2 over-expression
A reduced number of hair follicles. Many TUNEL positive cells in the developing hair follicles. Wavy hair, curly vibrissae, abnormal HF shape and arrangement. Sparse, kinky hairs, misaligned, variably angled, small HFs in skin grafts. Reduced awls and auchenes. At P10, retarded HF development. At E18.5, HFs are arrested at the early hair peg stage. Fewer and less developed vibrissae follicles. Essentialy hairless skin grafts. Transgene of Gli2 (K5-Gli2) partially rescues HF development, and skin grafts produce HFs. Expression of DNGli2 (hyperactive Gli2; K5DNGli2) recues the delay of HF development in Shh knock-out mice. At E16, retardation of HF development. Lack of whiskers and body hairs. An arrest in development at a stage corresponding to E17. No secondary HF development. Total lack of whisker development. Irregularly spread and oriented HFs and curly vibrissae. At E16, 40% fewer HFs. Msx2 is not required for HF initiation, but for maintenance: Msx2/ mice loose all hair by P14. Misaligned HFs with a shrunken matrix region. Hair shafts with irregular angles. Thinner outer root sheath. Expression of the NFkB superrepressor IkBaDN (DN) results in an identical HF phenotype as in tabby, downless and crinkled mice: Bald patch behind the ears, no hair on tail, only one coat hair type (awl hairs), no development of guard hairs. 50% less HF than in wild-type mice. Guard HF development initiates (up to stage 0/1), but no placode down-growth.
S99
S100
S101
S102 S103
S104
S105
S106 S107
S108 S109
S110 S111 S112
S113
S114
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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9
Table 1 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol tm1Grd
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
At E16, no placode formation similar to IkBaDN, downless and tabby mice: No guard hairs. At E18, retarded HF development (secondary HF development), 70% reduced HFs. Sparse hairs on the skin grafts. Delay of HF development at E18.5 and E19.0. At P1, delay in HF morphogenesis. Lack of hair shaft formation. Sparse and curly vibrissae. Disoriented and disorganized HFs. Delay of HF morphogenesis by activation of transgene expression between E10.5– 14.5. More severe delay of HF morphogenesis than Smad7 single transgenic mice due to suppression of BMP and WNT signaling. Degenerated HFs. Lack of surface hair and cyst formation. Disheveled hairs. Size and length reduction of hair shafts. Deformation of HFs. Bald spots. Increased zigzags, reduced awls. Increased zigzags, reduced awls. Atrophic, small hairs do not develop any HF stem cells. Absence of bulge Sparse hairs.
S115
Hypoplasia of selected pelage follicles. In heterozygous ragged: The coat contains guard hairs and awls but no auchenes or zigzags. Homozygous mice lack pelage hair and vibrissae entirely. Heterozygotes have very sparse hairs consisting mostly of Reduced zigzag hairs. Complete absence of HF development. At P1, complete lack of HFs. Not analyzed at earlier time points. Presumably identical to Trp63tm1Brd. Forced expression of DNp63 results in replacement of hair shafts by thick keratinized tissues. Conditional double deficient mice lacked vibrissae. Reduction in the number of HFs by 50%. Absence of vibrissae. Sparse hairs. Reduced and distorted HFs.
S123–124
NF-kB RelA, NF-kB c-Rel, Tumor necrosis factor
, Triple Tm: Rel Relatm1Bal, Tnftm1Ljo
11, 19, 17
Tm
Runt related transcription factor 2
Runx2tm1Mjo
17
Tm
SMAD7
K5.Smad7
18
Tg
SMAD7
K5.Smad7
18
Tg
SMAD7, epidermal over-expression. SMAD specific E3 ubiquitin protein ligase 2, epidermal over-expression. Double Tg
K5.Smad7 K5.Smurf2
18 11
Tg Tg
SMAD7, epidermal over-expression
K5.Smad7
18
Tg
Sox2lcc
3
Rad
Sox2
3
Tg
Sox9flox/flox hWT1-Cre (Y10:Cre)
11
Tm Tg
Sox18Gsfdcc1
2
ENU
2
S
SRY-box containing gene 2 SRY-box containing gene 2
Light coat and cycling Yellow submarine
SRY-box containing gene 9 (Sox9). Skin KO SRY-box containing gene 18
ysb
SRY-box containing gene 18
Gsf dark coat color 1 Ragged
Sox18
SRY-box containing gene 18
Opossum
Sox18Raop
2
S
SRY-box containing gene 18
Sox18tm1Koop
2
Tm
Transformation related protein 63
Trp63tm1Brd
16
Tm
16
Tm
Ra
tm1Fmc
Transformation related protein 63
Trp63
Transformation related protein 63
K5-tTA/pTRE-DNp63a
Transcription factor AP-2,a Transcription factor AP-2,g Trichorhinophalageal syndrome type I (human) Twist 2 Enzymes Acid phosphatase 2, lysosomal
Naked and ataxia
A disintegrin and metalloproteinase
ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide
Mottled Brindled
Tg
K14-Cre Tfap2atm3Will Tfap2ctm1Will Trps1tm1.1Shiv
13 2 15
Tm Tm Tm
Twist2tm1Eno
1
Tm
Acp2nax
2
S
Adam17tm1Imx
12
Tm
Atp7aMo
X
S
X
S
Mobr
Atp7a
Delayed hair appearance. Lumbar skin HFs contained extremely thin and short hair shafts. Stunted and curly vibrissae. Irregularly positioned and oriented hair follicles. Curly vibrissae evident within the first day of life. Curly vibrissae in heterozygous females. Strongly curled vibrissae and wavy coat in heterozygous males.
S116 S117
S118
S119
S119
S120 S120 S121–122
S29
S125 S126 S127 S128 S129
S130 S131 S132
S133
S134
S135 S136–137
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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10 Table 1 (Continued )
Mutant name 2+
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
MobrJ
Reference
ATPase, Cu transporting a polypeptide ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide
Brindled Jackson Dappled
X
S
Curly vibrissae.
Modp
Atp7a
X
Rad
S138
ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide
Macular
Atp7aMoml
X
S
Heterozygous females are similar in color and curliness of vibrissae to Mo/+ females. Curly vibrissae.
Mosaic
Atp7aMoms
X
S
S140
ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide ATPase, Cu2+ transporting a polypeptide UDP-Gal:bGlcNAc b1,4-galactosyltransferase, polypeptide 1 Conserved helix-loop-helix ubiquitous kinase
Tortoiseshell
Atp7aMoto
X
S
Heterozygous females have normal-colored and mutant hairs arranged in an irregular pattern of transverse bars. Slight wavy vibrissae.
Viable brindled
Atp7aMovbr
X
S
Curled vibrissae.
S142
B4galt1tm1Shur
4
Tm
Sparse hairs. Reduction in the density of hair follicles.
S143
Chuktm1Aki
19
Tm
S144–145
Ctsbtm1Jde Ctsltm1Cptr Ctslnkt
14 13 13
Tm Tm Rad
Absence of vibrissae.Reduction in the number of the HFs. Failure of HFs to invaginate deeply into the dermis. At P7, delay of hair appearance.
S147
Cathepsin L
Ctsltm1Cptr
13
Tm
Cathepsin L Cathepsin L Cathepsin L
Ctsltm1Cptr Ctsl Ctsltm1Alpk
13 13 13
Tm Tg Tm
Ctslfs
13
S
Dicer1, epidermal Tm
Dicer1tm1Smr, Tg(KRT14-cre)1Efu
12
Tm
Dicer1, epidermal Tm
Dicer1tm1Tara Tg(KRT14-cre)1Efu
12
Tm
Ggta1
2
Tg
Delay of hair appearance. Complete baldness around the eyes and the head. Hair shafts are defective with dilatation of hair canals. Delayed HF morphogenesis. Defect in inner root sheath differentiation and desquamation. Dilatation of hair follicle canals. Normalization of hair morphology. Abnormal HF orientation, hair shaft fragmentation, utricles. Progressive hair loss begininng at 3 months. Short or missing vibrissae at 2 days. Shorter hairs. At P7, delay of HF development and misangled and wavy HFs. HFs fail to extend into the dermis. Much smaller hair bulbs. Keratin 15 positive cells are absent. No stem cell markers. Hair germs appear to evaginate from the epidermis. Cyst-like structures in the epidermis. Abnormal hair growth.
Double Tm: Hdac1tm1Eno Hdac2tm1Eno
4 10
Tm Tm
Integrin linked kinase
Ilktm1Ref
7
Tm
Integrin linked kinase
Ilk
7
Tm
Map2k1tm1Chrn Tg(KRT14-cre)1Efu Mapk8tm1Flv Mapk9tm1Flv
9 14 11
Tm Tg Tm Tm
Map3k7tm1Aki K5-cre
4
Tm
Cathepsin B Cathepsin L Cathepsin L
Cathepsin L
Glycoprotein galactosyltransferase a1,3 Histone deacetylase 1 Histone deacetylase 2
Mitogen activated protein kinase kinase 1. Epidermal Tm Mitogen activated protein kinase 8 Mitogen activated protein kinase 9. Double Tm Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7
Nackt
Furless
Atp7a
Double Tm: Total absence of HF placode formation and morphogenesis simlar to p63 KO. Distorted HFs. Impaired downward migration of progenitor cells. At 1–2 weeks, scattered hairs with partial alopecia. At 4 weeks, progressive hair loss. At P4, 55% decrease in the number of HFs. Retardation of HF morphogenesis Reduced proliferation in HFs. 37% fewer HFs. At E18.5, disorganized and immature HF development. At birth, fewer HFs. Reduced HFs at E15.5. Retarded HF morphogenesis.
S139
S141
S146
S148
S149 S150
S151 S152
S153
S154
S155
S156
S157
S158 S159
S160
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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11
Table 1 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Phospholipase A2, group IIA (platelets, synovial fluid)
Tg(PLA2G2A)703Dsg
4
Tg
S161
Phospholipase A2, group IIA (platelets, synovial fluid)
PLA2G2A
4
Tg
Phospholipase C, d1
Plcd1tm1Tta
9
Tm
Protease, serine 8 (prostasin)
Prss8tm1.1Hum Tg(KRT14-cre)1Ipc Psen1tm2Shn Psen2tm1Haa Tg(Msx2-cre)5Rem
7
Tm
12 1
Tm Tm Tg
Ptentm1Mak K5-cre
19
Tm
At P7–10, scruffy and sparse hairs. At P16 severe alopecia. At 3 weeks, reinitiation of hair growth. Progressive hair loss afterwards. Larger HF with some follicular keratosis In homozygotes, delay of pelage hair appearance. Lack of normal IRS or ORS. Cyclic hair growth and hair loss. At P8, hairs fail to penetrated the epidermis. Hair canals are occluded with keratinocytes. At P15, HF morphology is severely affected, forming HF-derived cysts. Reduced HFs. Retardation of HF development. Short HFs. At P4, loosely packed cells with enlarged cytoplasm in HFs. At P12 and P15, degenerating HFs lose contact with dermal papilla. By P22, cysts replace HFs. Patchy hair loss. Ruffled and shaggy hairs. High density of HFs. At P9, retardation of HF development. Misaligned HFs perpendicular to the skin surface. Reduced HFs. Sparse hairs. At 1 week, delayed HF development, pyknotic nuclei containing cells lining the HFs. Lower HF density, small dermal papilla, thin IRS and ORS. Progressive hair loss At E18.5, poorly developed vibrissae. Homozygous skin grafts are devoid of hairs. Lack of penetration of hair shafts. Curly and thin hairs. Small hair bulbs. Curly vibrissae. Sparse and frizzy hairs. Disorganized hair medulla. At P3, small hair bulbs, narrow, immature hair shaft, lack of uniform orientation. At P5, thick ORS and thin IRS. At P4, small hair bulbs. At P10 sparse hairs. Wavy hairs and curly vibrissae. Disorganized HFs lacking uniform orientation. Thin IRS and hair shafts. At P6, fewer hair bulb cells. Small and round dermal papillae. Short sparse and curly hairs. Cuticles poorly adherent to the hair shafts. Ectodermal deletion of Tpp1 resulted in the absence of mature HFs at P4.
Presenilin1 Presenilin2
Phosphatase and tensin homolog, epidermal Tm Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2. Epidermal over-expression
Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2. Epidermal over-expression RecQ protein-like 4
Tg
Tg(K5-Ptgs2)19Kmd
Tg
Recql4tm1Abe
15
Tm
Ripk4tm1Pmh
16
Tm
Fuzzy
Sgk3fz
1
S
Frowzy
Sgk3fzfy
Receptor-interacting serine-threonine kinase 4 Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 3 Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 3 Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 3
Tg(K5-Ptgs2)19Kmd
1
S
ypc
Sgk3
1
S
Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 3
Sgk3tm1Dpea
1
Tm
Serum/glucocorticoid regulated kinase 3
Sgk3tm1Efu
1
Tm
Tripeptidyl peptidase I
Tpp1
7
Tm
Adhesion molecules and their associated proteins Cadherin 1
Ypc
Cdh1
Integrin a5
Ctnna1tm1Efu, Tg K14-Cre Tg(ITGA5)0794Fmw
Integrin b1
Tg(ITGB1)0840Fmw
Catenin alpha 1, epidermal Tm
Tg 18
Tm Tg
Tg
Delay of hair follicle morphogenesis. No vibrissae. Diminished signs of hair follicle morphogenesis. Few, short, curly vibrissae. Disorganized and abnormally oriented HFs. Few, short, curly vibrissae. Disorganized and abnormally oriented HFs.
S162
S163
S164 S165
S166 S167
S168
S169
S170
S171 S172 S173
S174
S175
S176
S177 S178 S179
S179
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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12 Table 1 (Continued )
Mutant name
Symbol tm1Ref
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Reduced number of hairs at P9. Only a few hairs are left after four weeks. At 9 days, many hair follicles show shortened hair bulb, folding of the layers of the inner root sheath cells, an increased number of outer sheath cells, and amorphous, mislocated hairs. Hair follicles do not grow into the dermis. Loss of basement membrane organization. Expression of N-terminally truncated plakoglobin protected against degradation. Hyperplasia of the HFs and dermal cysts. Novel HF buds from the ORS and from the epidermis Partial alopecia. No new hair germs or hair follicle tumors.
S180
Integrin b1, epidermal Tm
Itgb1 , Tg K5-Cre
8
Tm
Integrin b1, conditional epidermal Tm
Itgb1tm1Efu Tg K14-Cre
8
Tm
Junction plakoglobin
Jup
Tg
Jup Ctnnb1tm4Wbm Krt14tm1(cre)Wbm
Tg Tm
Junction plakoglobin Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1 Others Thymoma viral proto-oncogene 1
Akt1tm1Thir
12
Tm
tm1Nhy
Thymoma viral proto-oncogene 1, Thymoma viral proto-oncogene 2. Double Tm
Akt1 , Akt2tm1Rsg
12 12
Tm
Adenomatosis polyposis coli. Epidermal Tm
Apctm2Rak Tg(KRT14-cre)8Brn
18
Tm
Aqp2cph
15
S
Cdkn1atm1Led
17
Tm
Cdkn1b
6
Tm
Celsr1Crsh
15
ENU
Col5a2tm1Rmz
1
Tm
Col17a1 EdaraddCr
19 13
Tm S
Fuz Gab1tm1Thir
7 8
Tm Tm
Gab1tm1Wbm
8
Tm
Ikbkgtm1Mka
X
Tm
Aquaporin 2
Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (p21) Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1B Cadherin, EGF LAG seven-pass G-type receptor 1 (flamingo homolog, Drosophila) Collagen, type V, a2 Collagen, type XVII, a1 EDAR (Ectodysplasin-A recptor)associated death domain Fuzzy homolog (Drosophila) Growth factor receptor bound protein 2-associated protein 1(Gab1) Growth factor receptor bound protein 2-associated protein 1(Gab1) Inhibitor of kB kinase g (IKKg, NEMO)
Congenital progressive hydronephrosis
tm1Jro
Crash
tm1Shzu
Crinkled
Human keratin 8
Tg
Keratin complex 1, acidic, gene 16
Tg(KRT16)10Cou
Klotho
kl/kl
5
Tg
Kinase suppressor of Ras 1
Ksr1tm1Kole
11
Tm
Tg
At P4, HF development is delayed. Decreased number of HFs. Delay of HF development. At E18.5, HFs are still at developmental stage 1 or 2. At P10–12, short and misshapen vibrissae and short, shaggy pelage hairs. Hair bulbs are bent. Alopecia by 2 weeks of age. Ectopic HF-like structures in cornea, oral, salivary, and Harderian glands. Reduced zigzag hairs especially in heterozygotes. Large hair bulbs. Increased awl hairs. Misangled hair follicles at E18.5. Loss of planar polarization. Unusually deeply localized in the hypodermis hair bulbs. Partial hair loss. Phenotype identical to tabby, downless and IkBaDN mice. Retarded HF development. Delayed HF morphogenesis and thinner epidermis. At E17.5, retardation of HF development. Reduced number of HFs. At P5, sparse hair growth. Mouse model for Incontinentia Pigmenti. Only heterozygous mice are viable. Reduced number of HFs. Delay in development. Twisted and irregular HFs. Reduced and misoriented HFs. Short, curved and shaped like a sickle hair. Reduction in the number of hair follicles. At P10, fewer, disorganized, misoriented HFs with asynchronous growth. Separation of IRS from hair shafts. Short wavy hairs. Progressive hair loss.
S181
S182
S182
S73 S183
S184
S185
S186 S66 S187
S188 S189 S190 S191 S192
S193
S194
S195
S196
S197 S198
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Table 1 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Laminin a5
Lama5
tm1Jhm
2
Tm
S199–200
Laminin a5 Tm, transgenic Laminin a5 over-expressing mice, transgenic Laminin a5-a1 over-expressing mice Microtubule-associated protein 1B Nuclear receptor coactivator 6
Lama5tm1Jhm Mr5 Mr51
2
Tm Tg
Mtap1btm1Prop Ncoa6tm1Hhs
13 2
Tm Tm
Epidermal over-expression (bovine Keratin 5) of a non-degradable mutant of IkBa (inhibitor of kB). Pygopus2 RAS-related C3 botulinum substrate 1, epidermal Tm
K5-IkBaM
At E16.5, decreased hair germs by 50%. After grafting, failure of hair germ elongation. Poor association of dermal condensates under hair germs at E14.5 and E16.5. Rescue of hair abnormalities in Laminin a5 KOs by transgenic Laminin a5 and a5–a1 expression. Delay of HF development. In heterozygotes, reduction or total loss of HFs after wounding. Impaired hair growth. Alopecia. Hyperkeratosis.
Pygo2tm1.2Xdai Rac1tm1Brak Tg(KRT5-cre)5132Jlj
3 5
Tm Tm
RAS-related C3 botulinum substrate 1, epidermal Tm
Rac1tm1Djk K14-cre
5
Tm
V-raf-leukemia viral oncogene 1
Raf1tm1Zim
6
Tm
2 8
Tm
Tg
tm1Tyj
Retinoblastoma-like 1 (p107) Retinoblastoma-like 2
Rbl1 Rbl2tm1Tyj
Retroviral cyclin Serine (or cysteine) peptidase inhibitor, clade E, member 1 Stratifin Sclerostin domain containing 1
Tg(rv-CYCLIN)29Dlh Serpine1 Sfn Sostdc1tm1Nit
12
Tg Tm
Suppressor of tumorigenicity 14 (colon carcinoma) Suppressor of fused homolog (Drosophila) Tnf receptor-associated factor 6
St14tm1Bug
9
Tm
19
Tm
Traf6
2
Tm
Transient receptor potential cation channel, sub family V, member 3 Vang-like 2
Trpv3tm1.2Clph
11
Tm
Vangl2Lp
1
S
Wls K14Cre
3
Tm
Wntless, epidermal Tm
Sufu
tm1Rto
tm1Jino
Loop tail
deletion or of DNA isogenicity [45]. Another interesting development in the forward genetics field is transposon-based sitedirected mutagenesis [46]. In addition, the strategic and systematic generation of gene targeted mouse models across the entire genome has been initiated by different public and private entities [47,48]. 6. Selection and organisation of the presented mouse mutant tables Thus, an-ever growing number of genes responsible for HF morphogenesis, function and/or cycling has been identified by closely investigating the phenotypes of genetically engineered mice (GEM), spontaneous mutant mice and positional cloning. Mostly due to the detection of novel proteins expressed in skin and HFs, the number of mice exhibiting HF abnormalities has more than doubled
30% less HFs. Progressive hair loss beginning at 1 week. At P9, kinked HFs with constrictions. Thick hair bulbs. At P14, defective HFs with no clear hair bulbs. Abrupt end of IRS and ORS. Rudimentary hair follicles, absence of hairs on the skin surface. At birth, underdeveloped, less well organized HFs. Reduced HFs. Retardation of HF development. In skin grafts, increased hairs, multiple HFs sharing a unique hair channels, twisted HFs, multiple follicular keratin-filled cysts. Reduced number of HFs. Delayed HF morphogenesis.
Tg Tg
Tg
Reduced HF density. Ectopic HFs without change in HF cycling. At birth, fewer HFs. Retardation of HF development. In heterozytotes, ventral hair loss. Identical hair phenotype to tabby, downless, crinkled and IkBaDN mice. HFs were gently curved and pointed in different directions with variable angles. Mis-angled hair follicles at E18.5. Loss of planar polarization. Complete absence of HF development.
S201
S202 S203
S204
S205 S206
S207
S208 S209
S210 S211 S212 S213 S214 S215 S216
S217
S187
S218
since our last overview has been published in 2001. Due to space limitations, in the current review we therefore had to omit mice with spontaneous mutations, in which the genes responsible for the HF phenotype remain unknown. Mutant mice which exhibit only abnormalities in HF pigmentation [49] or sebaceous gland abnormalities [50] have also been excluded from coverage. All the references given in the tables are listed in the file ‘‘Supplementary References’’. In cases in which it was not possible to find a mutant name in the website of Mouse Genome Informatics (http://www.informatics.jax.org/), only the name of the gene is listed in the tables. Numerous GEMs display abnormalities of HF development (Table 1). For practical purposes, we do not distinguish between abnormalities in HF induction, spacing and morphogenesis. In Table 2, GEMs which display distinct abnormalities of HF cycle entry of progression are listed.
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 2 Mouse mutants with reported abnormalities of hair follicle cycling. Abbreviations: Ch, chromosome; IRS, inner rooth sheath; ORS, outer rooth sheath; Tm, targeted mutation; Tg, transgenic; S, spontaneous; Rad, radiation induced; UN, unknown. Mutant name Soluble factors and receptors Activin A receptor, type Ib
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Acvr1btm1.1Gsu Tg(KRT14-cre)8Brn
15
Tm
Retarded catagen entry.
S219
Tg
Delay of hair regrowth after depilation at telogen. Homozygotes do not enter into the telogen until P22–23. Acceleration of catagen and shortening of hair shaft length. Catagen retardation. Failure of HFs to initiate the first postnatal hair cycle. Lack of proliferation in outer root sheath cells below the stem cell compartment and hair matrix cells. Loss of quiescent HF stem cell niche. Delay in catagen entry.
S220
Antisense CD44 antigen BarH-like homeobox 2
Barx2tm1Rsd
Brain derived neurotrophic factor
Tg(Bdnf)1Paus
Brain derived neurotrophic factor Bone morphogenetic protein 4
tm1Tbn
Bdnf Tg(BMP4)6Blh
2
Tm Tg
Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1A. Epidermal Tm Cholinergic receptor, muscarinic 4
Bmpr1afl/fl K14-Cre Bmpr1atm2Bhr KRT14-cre Chrm4tm1Jwe
14 14
Tm Tg Tm
2
Tm
Delta-like 1
Dll1
17
Tm
EGF-like repeats and discoidin I-like domain 3 Estrogen receptor 2 (b)
Edil3
13
Tg
Esr2tm1unc
12
Tm
Estrogen receptor 1 (a) Estrogen receptor 2 (b)
Esr1tm1Ksk Esr2tm1unc
10 12
Tm Tm
Estrogen receptor 2 (b)
Esr2tm1unc
12
Tm
Fibroblast growth factor 5
Fgf5tm1Mrt
5
Tm
9
Tm Tg
Fibroblast growth factor 5
angora
Fgf5go
5
S
Fibroblast growth factor 5
Angora-Y
Fgf5goY
5
S
Fgf18tm1Tri Tg(KRT5cre)1Tak Gfra1tm1Jmi
18
Tm Tg
19
Tm
Gfra2tm1Msa
14
Tm
Ifngtm1Yiw
10
Tm
Fibroblast growth factor 18 Glial cell line derived neutrophilic factor family receptor a-1(GFRa-1) Glial cell line derived neutrophilic factor family receptor a-2(GFRa-2) Interferon g
Interleukin 6
Tg(Il6)1Efu
Jagged 1, epidermal Tm
Jag1 K5Cre
2
Tm Tg
Jagged 1 Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1 (Stabilised b catenin)
Jag1 K14DN-bcateninER
2
Tm Tg
Nerve growth factor Nerve growth factor receptor (p75) Neurotrophin 3
Tg(Ngf)47Kma Ngfrtm1Jae Ntf3tm1Jae
11 6
Tg Tm Tm
Neurotrophin 3 Neurotrophin 5 (4) Prolactin receptor
Tg(Ntf3)1Kma Ntf5tm1Jae Prlrtm1cnp
7 15
Tg Tm Tm
Retinoid X receptor a, epidermal Tm
Rxratm2Ipc Tg(KRT14-cre)1Ipc
2
Tm
Transforming growth facor b1 Transforming growth facor b1
Tgfb1tm1Doe Tgfb1
7 7
Tm Tm
Tg
S221 S222 S222 S223
S224 S7
At P17, delay in catagen development. Prolonged telogen. At 5 weeks, delayed entry into the first postnatal anagen. Early hair growth after depilation.
S225
17b-Estradiol fails to inhibit orchidectomy-induced anagen initiation. 17b-Estradiol fails to inhibit orchidectomy-induced anagen initiation. Accelerated catagen development at P19. AnagenVI extended and initiation of catagen delayed. 50% longer hair than that of wild types. Prolonged anagen, resulting in production of unusually long hair. AnagenVI extended by 3 days and initiation of catagen delays. Prolonged anagen. All hair types are longer. Short telogen in keratinocytespecific Fgf18 deficient mice. Accelerated catagen in heterozygotes. Accelerated catagen.
S228
At 5 weeks, HFs still at anagen. Hair loss in the dorsal and occipital area begininng at 6 weeks. Retarded hair growth possibly due to retardation of hair cycle. Progressive hair loss beginning at 5 weeks of age. At 5 weeks of age still in telogen. Seven and a half weekold mice are bald. Lack of anagen induction or HF de novo formation even in the presence of stabilized b-catenin expression. Acceleration of catagen. Catagen retardation. Catagen retardation in heterozygotes. Precocious catagen development. Catagen retardation. Accelerated hair cycling. Longer and coarser hairs. Impaired anagen initiation after depilation. Alopecia observed 6-7 weeks after tamoxifen treatment. Delay in catagen entry. Inhibition of telogen HFs to re-enter anagen.
S236
S226 S227
S228
S229 S230
S231–233
S233 S234 S235 S235
S237 S238
S238
S239 S239 S240 S240 S222 S241 S242
S243 S244
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Table 2 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol tm1Hyn
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
2
Tm Tg
At P19, delay in catagen initiation. After depilation, delay in anagen entry. Failure of transition from telogen to anagen. Failure of transition from telogen to anagen. Forced expression of RANK led to a precoccious anagen entry. At day P19, delay in catagen entry.
S245 S245
Accelerated hair regrowth after depilation. Nearly total hair loss by 8 months. Impairment of hair cycle initiation when anagen is induced by depilation at P18. Progressive hair loss begininng at 4 weeks. A human VDR transgene under the control of K14 promoter restores normal hair cycling in VDR null mice. A VDR transgene with a mutation in the hormone-binding domains restores normal hair cycling in VDR null mice. And a VDR transgene with a mutation in the activation domain results in a partial rescue of hair cycling in VDR null mice. A human VDR transgene under the control of K14 promoter restores normal hair cycling in VDR null mice. Short hair, premature onset of catagen.
S248
Thrombospondin 1 Thrombospondin 1
Thbs1
Tumor necrosis factor (ligand) superfamily, member 11 Tumor necrosis factor superfamily, member 11 Tumor necrosis factor superfamily, member 11 Transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 1 Vascular endothelial growth factor, epidermal overexpression. Vitamin D receptor
Tnfsf11tm1Pngr
14
Tm
Tnfsf11atm1.1Pngr
1
Tm
Tg(KRT14Vegfa)3Dtm Vdrtm1Ska
5
Tm
Vitamin D receptor
Vdrtm1Mbd
5
Tm
Vitamin D receptor
Vdrtm1Mbd K14-VDR
5
Tm Tg
Vitamin D receptor
Vdrtm1Mbd K14-VDR
5
Tm Tg
Vitamin D receptor
Vdrtm1Mbd K14-VDR
5
Tm Tg
S100A8-Tnfsf11a Trpv1
Wingless-related MMTV integration site 3 (Wnt3) Transcription factors Aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1, dermal Tm
tm1Jul
Tg 11
Tm Tg
Tg
Tg(Wnt3)7Gsb
S246 S246 S247
S249–250
S251 S252
S253
S254
S255
Arntltm1Bra
7
Tm
Delayed anagen progression.
S256
Ctnnb1, Tm CorinCre: Cor-cre
9
Tm
Lack of b-catenin in the dermal papilla results in absence of auchene hairs. No regeneration of HF from stem cells. Dramatic shortening and thinning of HFs. Role in stem cell activation. Continuous activation of b-catenin in telogen phase results in induction of an aberrant exaggerated anagen. Transient activation produces a normal anagen. B-catenin required for telogen-anagen transition. At P55, precocious entry into anagen. De novo HF morphogenesis in the interfollicular epithelium. Expression of stabilized b-catenin after 7days of 4OHT (tamoxifen) treatment induces anagen in existing HF and new HFs in IFE, including the paws. Delayed progression into the anagen. Premature disruption of hair cycle and discharge of immature HF. Lack of acid keratin expression. Dysregulation of regression process in catagen (DP remains distant from bulge), failure of regeneration and eventually complete hair loss. Hr controls timing of WNT signaling, which is required to initiate anagen. Retardation of anagen onset. Progressive hair and vibrissae loss beginning at 6 weeks of age. Enlarged and swollen bases of plucked HFs. Epitheloid cysts derived from HFs.
S257
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1 (Activated b catenin)
K5/S33Yb-cateninER
Tg
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1 (Stabilised b catenin)
K14-DNb-catenin
Tg
Catenin (Cadherin associated protein) b1 (Stabilised b catenin)
DNb-cateninER
Tg
Circadian locomotor output cycles kaput
Clocktm1.1Rep
5
Tm
Forkhead box N1
Traveling wave
Foxn1tw and Foxn1nu/nu
11
S
Hairless
Hairless
Hrhr
14
S
Lymphoid enhancer binding factor-1, absence of b-catenin binding domain
S246
Krt14DNLef1
Tg
S258
S259
S260
S256 S261–262
S263–277
S278
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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16 Table 2 (Continued )
Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tg
Alterations in hair cycle progression after normal initiation. Differentiation of HF stem cells into HF keratinocytes is disturbed. They differentiate into sebocytes, producing large cysts filled with oil. In Lhx2 null skin grafts: precocious anagen entry due to a shortened resting phase. At 11 weeks after transplantation, reduced numbers of label retaining cells (HF stem cells). Lack of differentiation and maintenance of HF stem cells. Accelerated wound-induced anagen development in heterozygous mice. Conditional deletion of Med1 in keratinocytes leads to a precoccious entry into catagen at P17. Shortened anagen. Premature and prolonged catagen. Precocious exogen. Cyclic alopecia, starting at P14. Reason: Expression of acidic keratins may be regulated by Msx2, together with Foxn1. Prolonged anagen, similar to angora mice. However, equally hair loss at a later time point (P18-P30) than Msx2tm1Rilm. Hair loss beginning at 14 days of age due to a premature catagen entry. Premature HF stem cell activation, leading to precocious follicle growth. Disruption of stem cell quiescence by aberrant expression of CDK4. Delayed entry into anagen after depilation. At 1-3 months of age, hair loss. Epidermal cysts derived from HFs. Delay in telogen to anagen transition. Lack of bulge stem cell proliferation during telogenanagen transition. At 3 months, obvious progressive hair loss. During catagen, HF fail to regress and persist in an abnormal anagen. Less TUNEL-positive cells. Same as in single Smad4 KOs, but much more intensive. This suggests synergy between Smad4 and Pten. Second anagen is not observed, and mice remained in telogen stage, even at P35. Normal first hair cycle. Retardation of hair cycling. Sparse hairs. Defective anagen phase induction: 3-4 weeks after tamoxifen injection, patchy hair loss and little or no hair growth after depilation. Short hairs. After activation of TCF3 (inhibitor of WNT signaling) expression by doxycycline at P1, lack of anagen entry and degeneration of HFs, because HF stem cells are not activated. TCF3 is required for maintaining HF stem cells in quiescence. At day 18 after depilation, HFs are still in catagen I-II. Retardation of catagen. Reduced number of apoptotic cells. At P19, retarded catagen entry.
S279
Lymphoid enhancer binding factor-1, absence of b-catenin binding domain
K14–DNLef1
LIM homeobox protein 2
Lhx2tm1Dra
2
Tm
LIM homeobox protein 2
Lhx2tm1Dra
2
Tm
Mediator complex subunit 1
Med1tm1Jkr
11
Tm
Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2)
Msx2tm1Rilm
13
Tm
Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2) Fibroblast growth factor 5
Msx2tm1Rilm Fgf5go(angora)
13 5
Tm S
Homeobox, msh-like 2 (Msx-2)
Tg(Msx2)1Rem
13
Tm
Nuclear factor of activated T-cells, cytoplasmic, calcineurin-dependent 1
Nfatc1tm1Glm K14Cre
18
Tm Tg
Nuclear factor I/C
Nfictm1Rmg
10
Tm
Rbpj Nes-Cre Runx1Fl/Fl K14-Cre
5
Tm
16
Tm
Smad4co/co K5-Cre
18
Tm
Smad4co/co K5-Cre Ptenco/co K5-Cre;Stat3flox/
18 19
Tm Tm
11
Tm
Stat5btm1Hwd
11
Tm
Taf4lox/lox K14-Cre-ERT2
2
Tm
Transcription factor 3 (TCF3), epidermal over-expression of TCF3
TRE-mycTcf3 K14-rtTA
6
Tm
Transformation related protein 53
Trp53tm1Tyj
11
Tm
Krt14tm1(cre)Wbm Miz1lox/lox
4
Tm
Recombination signal binding protein for immunoglobulin kJ region Runt related transcription factor 1 Epidermal Tm
SMAD4, epidermal Tm
SMAD4, epidermal Tm Phosphatase and tensin homolog Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (Stat3). Epidermal Tm Signal transducer and activator of transcription 5B TAF4a RNA polymerase II, TATA box binding protein (TBP)-associated factor (TAF4). Epidermal Tm
Zink finger and BTB domain containing 17 (Miz1, Zbtb17) Enzymes
f/f
S110
S280
S281
S282
S282
S112
S283
S284 S285 S286
S287
S288
S289
S290 S291
S292
S293–294
S295
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Table 2 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol
Thymoma viral protooncogene 1
Akt1
Caspase 3 Diacylglycerol O-acyltransferase 1
Krt14-CreER MosiCasp3 Dgat1tm1Far
Dicer1, ribonuclease type III Drosha, ribonuclease type III Heparanase
Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 5 Matrix metallopeptidase 14 (membrane-inserted) Phospholipase A2, group X
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tg
New hair growth in telogen after Akt activation. Ruffled and shaggy hairs. Large HFs. HF stem cell depletion.
S296
8
Tm
15
Tm
Dicer1tm1Smr Droshatm1Litt Hpse
12 15
Tm Tm Tg
Map3k5tm1Hijo
10
Tm
Mmp14tm1Hbh
14
Tm
Actb-Pla2g10 tm2Pst
Tg
Protein O-fucosyltransferase 1 Protein phosphatase 3, regulatory subunit B, a isoform (calcineurin B, type I) Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2
Pofut1 Ppp3r1tm2Grc Tg(KRT5-cre/ PGR)1Der Tg(K5-Ptgs2)19Kmd
2 11
PTK2 protein tyrosine kinase 2
Ptk2tm1Lfr Tg(KRT1-5cre)5132Jlj Terctm1Rdp
15
Tm
3
Tm
3 8
Tm Tm Tg
Telomerase RNA component
Telomerase RNA component Werner syndrome homolog (human) Telomerase reverse transcriptase Telomerase reverse transcriptase Telomerase RNA component Adhesion molecules Claudin 6 Gap junction protein, a1
Terctm1Rdp Wrntm1Lgu tetop-TERT actinrtTA tetop-TERT actinrtTA Terctm1Rdp Cldn6 Gja1m1Jnt
Tm Tm
Tg
3
Tg Tm
10
Tg ENU
Intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) Integrin a3
Icam1tm1Bay Icam1tm1Jcgr Itga3tm1Jak
5
Tm
11
Tm
Integrin b6
Itgb6tm1Des
2
Tm
Junction plakoglobin
Tg(JUP)4Pac
Others RhoGTPase activating protein 1
Tg
Arhgap1tm1Yizh
2
Tm
Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related
Atrtm1Bal Tg(UBC-cre/ ESR1)1Ejb
9
Tm
B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2)
Bcl2tm1Tsu
1
Tm
B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2)
Tg(BCL2)1Tsk
Tg
Bcl2-like (Bcl-xL)
Tg(BCL2L1)1Cbt
Tg
CD34 antigen
Cd34tm1Szk
1
Tm
Patchy alopecia at different locations after 9 weeks of age. Failure of catagen entry. Failure of catagen entry. At P16, delayed catagen entry. Enhanced hair regrowth after chemotherapy-induced hair loss. Delay of wounding-induced anagen initiation. Progressive patchy hair loss begininng at P50. Shortened anagen. Prolonged catagen and telogen. Delay in anagen reentry at P24. At P21–22, initiation of periodic hair loss. Lack of adherence of ORS to the hair shafts. At P11, precocious entry into the catagen. At 3–10 months, development of alopecia. Retarded catagen onset. From P7 until P17, sparse hairs. 25% fewer HFs. Alopecia in the third and sixth generation mice. Decreased percentage of hair follicles in anagen, increase in percentage of telogen follicles. 63% of 12–16-week-old mice show patchy hair loss. Rapid transition from telogen to anagen. Rapid transition from telogen to anagen.
S297 S298 S299 S299 S300
S301 S302 S303 S304 S305
S306
S307
S308
S309 S310 S310
At P16, precocious catagen. G60S mutation results in retarded anagen entry after depilation. Catagen acceleration.
S311 S312
At 45 days post grafting, increased numbers of telogen and catagen HFs. Retarded HF regression (catagen) after depilation. Precocious catagen development. Premature termination of the anagen.
S314
After removal of the dorsal hair by shaving, marked reduction of hair regeneration due to lack of anagen entry. 3–6 months after tamoxifen treatment, progressive hair loss. Delay in anagen progression after depilation. Degenerative HFs. Second hair cycle occurs later than normal at 5–6 weeks of age. Accelerated catagen progression. Increased alopecia, hair follicle dystrophy, and apoptosis after cyclophosphamide injection. Short hair with decrease in the duration of anagen and prolongation in telogen. Fgf-5 deficiency can reverse the Bcl-xLinduced phenotype. After TPA treatment, delay of entry into catagen.
S313
S315 S316
S317
S318
S319 S320
S321
S322
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18 Table 2 (Continued )
Mutant name Dishevelled 2, dsh homolog (Deosophila) Human papillomavirus type 16 E6/E7 papillomavirus oncogene ERBB receptor feedback inhibitor 1 Gasdermin A3
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tg(Dvl2)7Gsb
Tg
S255
Tg(bK6-E6/E7)M8
Tg
Short hair, premature onset of catagen. Longer anagen and no telogen. Lower hair density. At P18, still in anagen. Large HFs. Scarring alopecia. Sparse coat develops at the end of first hair cycle. At P21, long follicles without regressing. Lack of auchene hairs. Dilated infundibulum plugged with cornified material. Hair loss begininng at 3–4 weeks. At 9–12 weeks of age, destruction of HFs. At about 4 weeks of age, hairs become sparse on the head and neck. After 6 weeks loss is progressive. Hair loss beginning at P23. At P27, protracted abnormal catagen. Hair loss beginning around 3 weeks of age. Defective anagen entry with activated Kras expression. Progressive hair loss. Slower progression through catagen. Cysts in HFs. After plucking only occasional entry into anagen. Reduced HF stem cells. At P15, early catagen induction. Short hairs evident at P15, P40. At P17, retarded catagen entry. 11–15 days after tamoxifen treatment, diminution of the hair bulb, degeneration of the infundibulum into cysts. At 4–6 months, abnormal abdominal hairs. Increased catagen II–III and anagen IV–V HFs. Mild alopecia. Block at the telogen. Loss of CD34 expression in anagen bulge cells. 6 days after depilation, all HFs remain in telogen.
Bare skin
Tg (K14-Errfi1) Gsdma3Bsk
11
Tg ENU
Gasdermin A3
Defolliculated
Gsdma3Dfl
11
S
Gasdermin A3
Denuded
Gsdma3Reden
11
S
Gasdermin A3
Reduced coat 2
Gsdma3Rco2
11
ENU
Gsdma3I359N
11
ENU
6
Tm
Gasdermin A3 v-Ki-ras2 Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog LIM domain binding 1
Latent transforming growth factor b binding protein 1 Melanoma antigen, family D, 1 RAS-related C3 botulinum substrate 1, epidermal Tm
Ldb1
Tg
Ltbp1
Tg
Rac1tm1Djk Tg(KRT14-cre/ Esr1)20Efu
X 5
Tm Tm
Serine (or cysteine) peptidase inhibitor, clade B (ovalbumin), member 13 T-cell lymphoma breakpoint 1
Serpinb13
Tcl1tm1Rso
12
Tm
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome-like (human)
Wasltm2Sbs
6
Tm
Tg
S323 S324 S325
S326
S327
S328 S329 S330 S331
S332 S333 S334
S335
S336
S337
Table 3 Mouse mutants with reported abnormalities of hair structure. Abbreviations: Ch, chromosome; IRS, inner rooth sheath; ORS, outer rooth sheath; Tm, targeted mutation; Tg, transgenic; S, spontaneous; Rad, radiation induced; UN, unknown.
Soluble factors and receptors Ectodysplasin-A1 (EDA-A1)
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 Insulin-like growth factor binding protein 5 Lamin B receptor
Noggin
Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Tabby
EdaTa6J, EdaTa, EdaTac
X
S
Altered ultrastructure of awl hairs. It is also suggested that zigzag hair ultrastructure is converted into awl ultrastructure resulting in almost the same HF numbers as in wild-type mice. Thin hairs. Reduced hair medulla most likely due to increased apoptosis. Short hair shafts. Reduced hair medulla.
S12
Structural abnormality of IRS and cuticle. Scant, short coat and short and coiled vibrissae. Impairment of hair shaft differentiation. Fine, short, wavy and twisted hairs, containing bulbous pertubations in the shafts. Improperly organized Henle’s layer. Medulla with fewer, disorganized trichohyalin granules. HF contained a core with large loosely packed cells, replacing the IRS.
S339
Ichthyosis
Fgfr2
Tg
Igfbp5
Tg
Lbric
1
Nog
S
Tg tm2Rko
Notch 1, epidermal Tm
Notch1 Tg(Msx2-cre)5Rem
2
Tm
Notch 1 Notch 2 Epidermal Tms
Notch1tm2Rko Notch2tm1Rko Tg(Msx2-cre)5Rem Notch 1
2 3
Tm
2
Tm
Notch 1
Thin, short and wavy hairs.
S338 S338
S340 S165
S165
S341
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 3 (Continued ) Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Wavy hairs and short, curly vibrissae and a diffuse pattern of alopecia. Defect in differentiation of the inner root sheath. Persistence of inner root sheath remnants in later stage of the hair cycle. Curly vibrissae and wavy hairs. Abnormal differentiation of the medulla and the cuticle. At 3–5 months, ORS hyperplasia due to abnormally high ORS cell proliferation.
S342
S102
Notch 1
Tg(Notch1)1Anc
Tg
Notch 1
Tg(Notch1)A3Rko
Tg
Patched 1. Companion cell layer Tm Transcription factors Distal-less homeobox 3. Epidermal Tm
Krt6a-Cre;Ptch1neo/neo
13
Tm
Dlx3tm2Mso Tg(KRT14-cre)Smr
11
Tm Tg
S343
S344
Forkhead box N1
Nude
Foxn1nu
11
S
Forkhead box N1 Forkhead box N1 Forkhead box N1
Nude St Louis Nude streaker Traveling wave
Foxn1nuStL Foxn1nustr Foxn1tw
11 11 11
S S S
Forkhead box N1 Forkhead box N1 Forkhead box N1. Over-expression under the involucrin promoter. Forkhead box N1. Cosmid over-expression of genomic FoxN1 clone. Forkhead box Q1
Nude Yurlovo
Foxn1nuY Foxn1tm1Tbo Tg(Hoxcn13)61Blb
11 11
S Tm Tg
Structural HF abnormalities already visible at P5. At P9, no apparent medulla. No development of hair bulbs and undifferentiated hair shafts. Multiple fractures and twist in hair shafts. Short and curly vibrissae. Abnormal globular aggregates in the IRS and hair shaft. Similar to nude mice. Similar to nude mice. Waves of traveling stripes with aberrant pigmentation along body. In wave front abnormal HFs with bent and coiled hair shafts. Similar to nude mice. Similar to nude mice. Wavy coat and curly whiskers.
Tg
Rescue of nude hair phenotype.
S351
Satin
Foxq1sa
13
Rad
S352
Forkhead box Q1
Satin, ENU1
Foxq1sae1
13
ENU
GATA binding protein 3
Gata3tm1Gsv
2
Tm
GATA binding protein 3. Epidermal Tm
Gata3tm3Gsv Tg(KRT14-cre)8Brn
2
Tm
Grainyhead-like 1
Grhl1
12
Tm
15
Tm
Tg(Foxn1)G2Hon
S345
S346 S347 S261
S348 S349 S350
Homeo box C13
Hoxc13
Homeo box C13
Tg(Hoxc13)61B1Awg
Avian musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma (v-maf) AS42 oncogene homolog V-maf musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene family, protein B (avian) OVO homolog-like 1
Maftm1Mym
8
Tm
Thin hairs. Abnormal keratinization of hair shaft. Shiny hairs. Disorganized medulla cells. Lack of air spaces and cortical ridges in medulla. At E18.5, lack of IRS. In skin graft, lack of Huxley’s layer and IRS cuticle cells, short hair shafts. Thick ORS, absence of Huxley’s layer and IRS cuticle. Short and stubby hairs growing at a wide angle, often parallel to the skin surface. Sparse hairs. Clefts between ORS and IRS. Hair fracturs at the skin surface all over the body, resulting in complete alopecia. Lack of or irregular septum in cuticle, resulting in fracturing near the root. Thickened ORS. Kinked vibrissae. Irregularly patterned cuticle at E18.5.
Mafbtm1Jeng
2
Tm
Thin and irregularly patterned cuticles.
S358
Ovol1tm1Efu
19
Tm
S359
5
Tm
Kinks and/or intercellular splits within or along the hair shafts. Disrupted organization of IRS and cuticle layern. Cystic degeneration. At 6 months of age, 90% of the fragile zigzag hairs display much less pronounced bends with various bending directions. Less dense and ruffled hairs in adults. Much less-prominent bends in the auchenes and zigzags. Shorter zigzags with fewer and thickened bends. Abnoramal cuticle formation and missing interlocking structure between cuticle and IRS cuticle.
S361
tm1Mrc
tm1Hon
Rbpj
Recombination signal binding protein for immunoglobulin k J region Runt related transcription factor 1. Epidermal Tm
Runx1tm2Spe Tg(KRT5-cre)5132Jlj
16
Tm
Runt related transcription factor 3
Runx3tm1Yg
4
Tm
SRY-box containing gene 21
Sox21
14
Tm
Adam10tm2Psa K14-Cre
9
Tm
Enzymes A disintegrin and metallopeptidase domain 10
ColI-Cre
Tg
Destroyed HF with epidermal cyst formation.
S353
S354
S106
S355 S356
S357
S358
S360
S362
S288
S363
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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20 Table 3 (Continued )
Mutant name
Symbol tm1Prc
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
A disintegrin-like and metallopeptidase (reprolysin type) with thrombospondin type 1 motif, 2 Deoxyribonuclease 1-like 2
Adamts2
11
Tm
At 2 months, less dense hairs with thinner hair shafts.
S364
Dnase1l2tm1Eckh
17
Tm
S365
Excision repair cross-complementing rodent repair deficiency, complementation group 2 Excision repair cross-complementing rodent repair deficiency, complementation group 2 Matrix metallopeptidase 9 Phospholipase A2, group X
Ercc2tm1Jhih
7
Tm
Ercc2tm2(ERCC2)Jhih
7
Tm
Mmp9tm1Tvu Pla2g10tm1Kiku
2 16
Tm Tm
2
Tg Tg Tm
Tnfaip3 K14-Cre
10
Tm
Indentations in hair cuticles. Hairs are less resistant to mechanical stress. Brittle hairs and nails like trichothiodystrophy. Reduced cysteinerich matrix proteins of the hair. From 3 monthsonwards, brittle and greasy hairs. Follicular dilation and sebaceous gland hyperplasia. Decreased width of the hair canal. Disorganized and small ORS vacuoles. Thin ORS. Scarse and curly whiskers at 3 weeks of age in bi-transgenic mice. Thin hairs with irregular torsions. Small cracks in the cuticle. Thin and fragile hairs with cuticle damages.
Cdh1 K14-Cre
8
Tm
S372
Cadherin 1 Epidermal Tm
Cdh1 Krox20-Cre
8
Tm
Desmoglein 3
Dsg3tm1Stan
18
Tm
Desmoglein 3
Dsg3tm1Stan
18
Tm
Dsg3bal
18
S
Dsg3balPas
18
S
At P10, hairs are short and fragile. By 1.5 months of age, misangled HFs. Distorted vibrissae. Adherens junctions between the companion layer and Henle layer, and between the Henle layer and the Huxley layer are missing. At P30, dorsal hairs became less shiny. Curly vibrissae. Reduction of intercellular tightness in the Huxley layer. Loss of cell adhesion (acantholysis) between the cells surrounding the telogen club and the basal layer of the outer root sheath epithelium. Rescue of Dsg3 deficient mice phenotype by the expression of Dsg1 transgene. Separation between the inner and outer root layer of the outer root sheath. Separation between the inner and outer root layer of the outer root sheath. Short hair shaft with a focal degeneration. Abnormal cornification of the matrix region with degeneration. Periodic nodules along the shaft resembling trichorrhexis Dishevelled, thinner and dull hairs. Altered medulla airspaces. Reduction of IRS length.
Plau Plaur
Plasminogen activator, urokinase Plasminogen activator, urokinase receptor Transglutaminase 3, E polypeptide
tm1.1Gvl
Tumor necrosis factor a-induced protein 3 Adhesion molecules Cadherin 1. Epidermal Tm
S366
S367
S368 S303 S369 S370 S371
S373
S374–375
S376
Desmoglein 3. One base pair insertion in Dsg3 Desmoglein 3
Balding
Desmoglein 4
Lanceolate hair
Dsg4lah
18
ENU
Desmoglein 4
Lanceolate hair-J
Dsg4lahJ
18
S
Pkp3tm1Fvr
7
Tm
AifmHq
X
S
Structural abnormality of hair shaft.
S383
Cdc42
4
Tm
S384
Cst6Ichq
19
S
At P14, no hair matrix, IRS, or hair shaft cells observed. Homozygotes fail to develop normal first hair coat. Few hairs emerge, and the short and thin hair shafts are surrounded by a collar of cornified cells. Hairs break easily. Striped hair coat resulting from areas of shorter and wrinkled hair shafts. HFs with dystrophic or absent inner root sheath. Premature separation of hair shaft from the inner root sheath. Abnormal keratinization.
Plakophilin 3
Others Apoptosis-inducing factor mitochondrion-assiated 1 Cell division cycle 42 homolog (S. cervisiae) Cystatin E/M
Harlequin
tm1Brak
Adenovirus truncated E1a
Phenylalkylamine Ca2+ antagonist (emopamil) binding protein Inositol1,4,5-triphosphate receptor 3 Keratin complex 2, basic, gene6 (Dominant negative) Keratin complex 2, basic, gene6 (C-terminal change) Sheep wool intermediate keratin
Tg(Av-E1A)901Gpd
tattered
EbpTd tm1Kmik
Itpr3
Tg(Krt2-6a)1Der
Tg
X
Rad
17
Tm Tg Tg
Tg(KRT2-9)1Grog
Tg
Loosely attached telogen HFs. Sparse keratin filaments. Collapsed keratin filaments in the outer root sheath. Disorganized appearance of outer root sheath. Vacuolization of ORS cells. Hairs break off near the skin surface.
S377–379 S377–379 S380
S381 S382
S385
S386
S387–388 S389 S390–391 S390–391 S392
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 3 (Continued ) Mutant name Keratin 17
Symbol Krt17
tm1Cou
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
11
Tm
At P10, premature separation of the ORS and IRS from the hair shaft. Cytolysis and pyknotic nuclei in ORS. Break and rupture of the hair shafts. Massive apoptotic cells in hair bulbs. Curved vibrissae and wavy hair until about 4 weeks of age. Homozygotes have extremely curly hairs. Between 3 and 6 weeks of age wavy hairs pointing in different directions. At 5 weeks, curved and twisted HFs. Lack of uniform thickness and abnormal keratinization in IRS. Curly vibrissae and hairs with kinks and twists. Defective keratinization of Henle’s and Huxley’s layers. At P10, curly hairs with bends. Irregularly formed Henle’s and Huxley’s layers. Formation of large whorls by intermediate filaments in Henle’s layer. Rough coat developing at about P15. Focal distentions of the hair shafts associated with clusters of loose aggregates of round cells. Fractioning of the cuticle. Breakage of the shafts. Curly hairs. Thinner hair shafts. At P8, abnormal shape and orientation of HFs. At P20, smaller club with few club sheath cells attached. Reduction of anchoring protrusions in keratinized cells. Abnormally oriented and curved hairs. Loss of adhesion in the IRS, and between the IRS and hair shaft. Premature keratinization of IRS. Fragile hair shafts. Absence of regular cuticular separation. Wavy vibrissae at 2–3 days. Thinner hairs or alopecia. Hair shafts have pits, striations, and protrusions.
S393
Keratin 71
Caracul
Krt71Ca
15
S
Keratin 71
Directional caracul
Krt71Cad
15
S
15
S
CaRin
Keratin 71
Caracul Rinshoken
Krt71
Keratin 71
Reduced coat 3
Krt71rco3
15
ENU
Keratin 71
Reduced coat 12
Krt71Rco12
15
ENU
Krt75tm1Der
15
Tm
Waved 3
Ppp1r13lWa3
7
S
Repeated epilation
SfnEr
4
Rad
Serine peptidase inhibitor, Kazar type 5
Spink5tm1Hov
18
Tm
Serine protease inhibitor, Kunitz type 1 SV40 T antigen
Spint1tm1HK
2
Tm
Keratin 75
Protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inihibitor) subunit 13 like Stratfin
Tetratrcopeptide repeat domain 7
Tg Flaky skin
Ttc7fsn
17
S
S394 S395 S396
S397
S398
S399
S400 S401
S402
S403 S404 S405
Table 4 Mouse mutants with reported secondary hair abnormalities as a result of extrafollicular events/pathology. Abbreviations: Ch, chromosome; IRS, inner rooth sheath; ORS, outer rooth sheath; Tm, targeted mutation; Tg, transgenic; S, spontaneous; Rad, radiation induced; UN, unknown; ENU, ethyl-nitrosourea induced.
Soluble factors and receptors Fas antigen
Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Lymphoproliferation
Faslpr
19
S
MRL/lpr mice lose hairs with increasing dermal T-cell infiltration. Hair loss due to dermal mononuclear cell infiltration. Hair loss due to lymphocyte and neutrophil infiltration. Hair loss due to T cell infiltration. Hair loss due to lymphocyte and mast cell infiltration. Hair loss due to inflammatory cell infiltration including mast cells. Hair loss due to T lymphocyte and monocyte infiltration. Hair loss due to T lymphocyte infiltration.
S406–407
Interleukin 1a
Tg(Il1a)1.1Tsk
Tg
Interleukin 2
Il2
Tg
Interleukin 7 Interleukin 15
Tg Tg
Interleukin 31
Il7 Tg(H2-D-Il15) 3304Clgr Il31
Interferon g
Ifng
Tg
Transforming growth factor b1 Transcription factors E2F transcription factor 2
Tg
Tgfb1tm1N
7
Tm
E2f2tm1Zubi
4
Tm
11
Tm
tm1.1Mrc
Homeo box B8
Hoxb8
Interferon regulatory factor 2
Irf2tm1Mak
8
Tm
Pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1
Pdx1tm1Cvw
5
Tm
Inflammatory infiltration. Hair loss in the aged mice. Excessive hair grooming leads to hair removal. Lymphocytic infiltration in the dermis. Progressive hair loss begininng at 8 weeks of age. Malnutrition.At P6.5, very little fur.
S408 S409 S410 S411 S412 S413 S414 S415 S416 S417
S418
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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22 Table 4 (Continued )
Mutant name
Symbol
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
Relb
7
Tm
Alopecia and hyperkeratosis at 4–10 weeks of age due to inflammatory cell infiltrations in the skin. Mouse model for atopic dermatitis.
S419
Agatm1Vk
8
Tm
Aspartylglycosaminuria. At 5 months of age, hairs became disheveled. Arginine deficiency. Delay of HF morphogenesis. Distortion of HFs. Keratin plugs clogging the hair canals. Resembles maple syrup urine disease. Thin and scant hairs. Hyperhomocysteinemia. At 3 months, thin hairs on the head. Increased number of HFs on the back. Double mutants showed severe dilatation of HFs.
S420
tm1Brv
NfkB RelB
Enzymes Aspartylglucosaminidase Arginase 1, liver
Tg(Fabp2-Arg1)1Wla
Tg
Bcat2m1Ytc
7
ENU
Cbstm1Unc
17
Tm
Excision repair cross-complementing rodent repair deficiency, complementation group 2. Xeroderma pigmentosum, complementation group A Helicase, lymphoid specific
Ercc2tm2(ERCC2)Jhih Xpatm1Hvs
7 4
Tm Tm
Hellstm1Rarc
19
Tm
Iduronate 2-sulfatase
Idstm1Muen
X
Tm
8
Tm
Branched chain aminotransferase 2, mitochondrial Cystathione b-synthase
Mutation 1, Yuan-Tsong Chen
tm1Cgn
Inhibitor of kappaB kinase beta (IKK2), epidermal Tm
Ikbkb K14-Cre
Lipase, member H
Lipid defect
Liphlpd1
Lipin1
Fatty liver dystrophy
Lpn1fld
5,10-Methylentetrahydrofolate reductase NAD(P) dependent steroid dehydrogenase-like. Mutation in Nsdhl gene. NAD(P) dependent steroid dehydrogenase-like. Mutation in Nsdhl gene. Polymerase (DNA directed) g
12
S
Mthfr
4
Tm
Bare patches 1 Harwell
NsdhlBpa1H
X
Rad
Striated 1 Harwell
NsdhlStr1H
X
Rad
Polgtm1.1Lrsn
7
Tm
Polgtm1Tprol
7
Tm
Ptpn6me
6
S
6
S
tm1Rzn
Polymerase (DNA directed) g Protein tyrosine phosphatase, non receptor type 6 Protein tyrosine phosphatase, non-receptor type 6 N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (sulfamidase) Adhesion molecules Catenin (cadherin associated protein), d1. Epidermal Tm Integrin b6
Motheaten
mev
Viable motheaten
Ptpn6
Mucopolysaccharidosis IIIA
Sgshmps3a
11
S
Ctnnd1tm1Abre Tg(KRT14-cre)1Efu
2
Tm
Itgb6tm1Des
2
Tm
Itgb2tm1Bay Itgb2tm2Bay
10
Tm
Gsdma3Ae
11
ENU
Integrin b2 (CD18)
Others Gasdermin A3
Tg
Alopecia and excoriation
Human apolipoprotein C1
Tg(APOC1)1Lmh
Tg
Inhibitor of kappa B kinase gamma (IKKg/NEMO)
Ikbkgtm1Mka
X
Tm
Lamin A
Lmnatm2Stw
3
Tm
Nuclear factor of k light chain gene enhancer in B-cells inhibitor z Secretogranin V
Nfkbiztm1Mamo
16
Tm
Scg5tm1Led
2
Tm
Hypomethylation of DNA. At P17, hair loss and graying. Resembling Hunter syndrome. At 3–4 months of age, development of alopecia. With lymphocyte infiltration, resembling psoriasis. At P8, hair loss with widespread scaling. Problem with fat metabolism. At P3, retarded HF development. Problem with fat metabolism. Retarded and abnormal hair growth. Hyperhomocysteinemia. Sparse hairs appear 5 days later than wild-type. Hyperkeratosis involving hair follicles resembling nonbullous ichthyosis. Foci of alopecia after 5 days of age. Hyperkeratosis involving HFs resembling nonbullous ichthyosis.
S421
S422 S423
S424
S425 S426 S427
S428 S429 S430 S431–432
S432–433
Varying alopecia initiated at about 25 weeks as a sign of premature aging. At 9 months of age, hair loss and graying develops as a sign of premature aging. Disruption of HFs after the neutrophilic infiltration. The disease progresses more slowly than that of motheaten mice with neutrophilic infiltration. Resembles Sanfilippo syndrome. At 6–7 months, hairs became scruffy.
S434
Lymphocytes infiltration. Large patches of hair loss, which were rescued by dexamethasone treatment. Juvenile baldness associated with infiltration of macrophages into the skin. Hyperkeratosis and diffuse lymphocyte infiltration in the dermis. Alopecia at a mean age of onset of 11 weeks.
S441
Immune-mediated destruction of bulge stem cells. Inflammatory cells in the dermis. Atrophic sebaceous glands, thin hair-coat, thickened epidermis. In females at P10, sparse hair growth accompanied by neutrophil infiltration. Mouse model for incontinentia pigmenti. Resembles progeria. Reduced number of HFs. Progressive hair loss beginning at 4–8 weeks of age in the periocular skin with mononuclear infiltration. Resembling Cushing’s syndrome. Thin hairs. Regional alopecia.
S435 S436–438 S439
S440
S442 S443
S444 S445
S446
S447 S448
S449
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001
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Table 4 (Continued ) Mutant name Solute carrier family (zinc transporter), member 4. Nonsense mutation in Slc30a4 gene Survival motor neuron 1. Human surviaval motor neuron 2
Lethal milk
Symbol Slc30a4
lm
Smn1tm1Hung Tg(SMN2)2Hung
Table 3 summarizes mice with abnormalities of hair fiber ultrastructure. Since several mutant mice also have hair abnormalities as a result of extrafollicular events, they are listed separately in Table 4. 7. Published hair phenotype descriptions: cautionary comments Note that analysis and description of hair phenotypes differs greatly between the different laboratories, and first reports of a hair phenotype often are so cursory that they need to be interpreted with great caution. In many cases, the hair phenotype was only an – often unexpected – chance observation, with hair research being well outside of the primary interest and expertise of the reporting laboratory. Therefore, one or more of the four routine mistakes outlined above often were made in the initial hair phenotype description, and the hair phenotype of many GEM remains to be subjected to professional, quantitative hair phenotype analysis. In consequence, initial hair phenotype descriptions should not be accepted uncritically. Moreover, some published hair phenotype descriptions are rather superficial or vague, making it difficult to correctly sort them into one of the 4 phenotype categories reflected by the 4 tables shown in the review. More professional future hair phenotype analyses of these mutants may thus necessitate corresponding corrections. Another note of caution applies to published claims that a given mouse mutant has ‘‘no hair phenotype’’. Most newcomers to the field tend to expect that a hair phenotype is only present if there is visible hair loss or appreciable changes in hair shaft length, structure and/or pigmentation. This is an erroneous assumption: Even substantial changes in the speed of HF morphogenesis and/or the HF cycling characteristics can go along without any macroscopically detectable changes in the murine fur coat. Given the enormous frequency of HF-associated changes in professionally analysed GEMs, in which a HF phenotype was entirely unexpected, it is advisable to follow the golden rule ‘‘Every mouse mutant has a hair phenotype – until ruled out by quantitative histomorphometry of HF morphogenesis [6] and cycling [5,7].’’ Appendix A. Supplementary data Supplementary data associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012. 10.001. References [1] Paus R, Cotsarelis G. The biology of hair follicles. N Engl J Med 1999;341:491–7. [2] Schneider MR, Schmidt-Ullrich R, Paus R. The hair follicle as a dynamic miniorgan. Curr Biol 2009;19:R132–42. [3] Nakamura M, Sundberg JP, Paus R. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: annotated tables. Exp Dermatol 2001;10:369–90. [4] Sundberg JP. Handbook of mouse mutations with skin and hair abnormalities: abnormal models and biomedical tools. Boca Raton Florida: CRC Press; 1994. [5] Sundberg JP, Peters JM, Paus R. Analysis of hair follicles in mutant laboratory mice. J Investig Dermatol Symp Proc 2005;10:264–70.
Ch
Type
Abnormalities
Reference
2
S
Alopecia due to zinc deficiency.
S450–451
13
Tm
Resembles spinal muscular atrophy. At P10, delay of HF development.
S452
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Motonobu Nakamura (MD, PhD) is Professor at Department of Dermatology in University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan. He graduated from Kyoto University, Japan and received his MD degree in 1991. He received his PhD in 1997 at Kyoto University. In 2000–2002, he served as Visiting Researcher under Prof. Ralf Paus at Department of Dermatology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany. He moved to University of Occupational and Environmental Health as the Assistant Professor in 2008 and became Professor in 2012. His research interest includes pathomechanisms of alopecia.
Please cite this article in press as: Nakamura M, et al. Mutant laboratory mice with abnormalities in hair follicle morphogenesis, cycling, and/or structure: An update. J Dermatol Sci (2012), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdermsci.2012.10.001