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Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population

Obesity and its attendant conditions have become major health problems worldwide, and obesity is currently ranked as the fifth most common cause of death globally. Complex environmental and genetic factors are causes of the current obesity epidemic. Diet, lifestyle, chemical exposure, and other conf...

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Autores principales: Qahaz, Nayrouz, Lone, Iqbal M., Khadija, Aya, Ghnaim, Aya, Zohud, Osayd, Nun, Nadav Ben, Nashef, Aysar, Abu El-Naaj, Imad, Iraqi, Fuad A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10671513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38003328
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242216136
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author Qahaz, Nayrouz
Lone, Iqbal M.
Khadija, Aya
Ghnaim, Aya
Zohud, Osayd
Nun, Nadav Ben
Nashef, Aysar
Abu El-Naaj, Imad
Iraqi, Fuad A.
author_facet Qahaz, Nayrouz
Lone, Iqbal M.
Khadija, Aya
Ghnaim, Aya
Zohud, Osayd
Nun, Nadav Ben
Nashef, Aysar
Abu El-Naaj, Imad
Iraqi, Fuad A.
author_sort Qahaz, Nayrouz
collection PubMed
description Obesity and its attendant conditions have become major health problems worldwide, and obesity is currently ranked as the fifth most common cause of death globally. Complex environmental and genetic factors are causes of the current obesity epidemic. Diet, lifestyle, chemical exposure, and other confounding factors are difficult to manage in humans. The mice model is helpful in researching genetic BW gain because genetic and environmental risk factors can be controlled in mice. Studies in mouse strains with various genetic backgrounds and established genetic structures provide unparalleled opportunities to find and analyze trait-related genomic loci. In this study, we used the Collaborative Cross (CC), a large panel of recombinant inbred mouse strains, to present a predictive study using heterozygous Smad4 knockout profiles of CC mice to understand and effectively identify predispositions to body weight gain. Male C57Bl/6J Smad4+/− mice were mated with female mice from 10 different CC lines to create F1 mice (Smad4+/−x CC). Body weight (BW) was measured weekly until week 16 and then monthly until the end of the study (week 48). The heritability (H2) of the assessed traits was estimated and presented. Comparative analysis of various machine learning algorithms for predicting the BW changes and genotype of mice was conducted. Our data showed that the body weight records of F1 mice with different CC lines differed between wild-type and mutant Smad4 mice during the experiment. Genetic background affects weight gain and some lines gained more weight in the presence of heterozygous Smad4 knockout, while others gained less, but, in general, the mutation caused overweight mice, except for a few lines. In both control and mutant groups, female %BW had a higher heritability (H2) value than males. Additionally, both sexes with wild-type genotypes showed higher heritability values than the mutant group. Logistic regression provides the most accurate mouse genotype predictions using machine learning. We plan to validate the proposed method on more CC lines and mice per line to expand the literature on machine learning for BW prediction.
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spelling pubmed-106715132023-11-09 Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population Qahaz, Nayrouz Lone, Iqbal M. Khadija, Aya Ghnaim, Aya Zohud, Osayd Nun, Nadav Ben Nashef, Aysar Abu El-Naaj, Imad Iraqi, Fuad A. Int J Mol Sci Article Obesity and its attendant conditions have become major health problems worldwide, and obesity is currently ranked as the fifth most common cause of death globally. Complex environmental and genetic factors are causes of the current obesity epidemic. Diet, lifestyle, chemical exposure, and other confounding factors are difficult to manage in humans. The mice model is helpful in researching genetic BW gain because genetic and environmental risk factors can be controlled in mice. Studies in mouse strains with various genetic backgrounds and established genetic structures provide unparalleled opportunities to find and analyze trait-related genomic loci. In this study, we used the Collaborative Cross (CC), a large panel of recombinant inbred mouse strains, to present a predictive study using heterozygous Smad4 knockout profiles of CC mice to understand and effectively identify predispositions to body weight gain. Male C57Bl/6J Smad4+/− mice were mated with female mice from 10 different CC lines to create F1 mice (Smad4+/−x CC). Body weight (BW) was measured weekly until week 16 and then monthly until the end of the study (week 48). The heritability (H2) of the assessed traits was estimated and presented. Comparative analysis of various machine learning algorithms for predicting the BW changes and genotype of mice was conducted. Our data showed that the body weight records of F1 mice with different CC lines differed between wild-type and mutant Smad4 mice during the experiment. Genetic background affects weight gain and some lines gained more weight in the presence of heterozygous Smad4 knockout, while others gained less, but, in general, the mutation caused overweight mice, except for a few lines. In both control and mutant groups, female %BW had a higher heritability (H2) value than males. Additionally, both sexes with wild-type genotypes showed higher heritability values than the mutant group. Logistic regression provides the most accurate mouse genotype predictions using machine learning. We plan to validate the proposed method on more CC lines and mice per line to expand the literature on machine learning for BW prediction. MDPI 2023-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10671513/ /pubmed/38003328 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242216136 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Qahaz, Nayrouz
Lone, Iqbal M.
Khadija, Aya
Ghnaim, Aya
Zohud, Osayd
Nun, Nadav Ben
Nashef, Aysar
Abu El-Naaj, Imad
Iraqi, Fuad A.
Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title_full Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title_fullStr Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title_full_unstemmed Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title_short Host Genetic Background Effect on Body Weight Changes Influenced by Heterozygous Smad4 Knockout Using Collaborative Cross Mouse Population
title_sort host genetic background effect on body weight changes influenced by heterozygous smad4 knockout using collaborative cross mouse population
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10671513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38003328
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242216136
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