Publication | Open Access
A mutation in a mitochondrial transmembrane protein is responsible for the pleiotropic hematological and skeletal phenotype of <i>flexed-tail</i> (<i>f/f</i>) mice
111
Citations
28
References
2001
Year
We have studied the flexed-tail (f) mouse to gain insight into mammalian mitochondrial iron metabolism. Flexed-tail animals have axial skeletal abnormalities and a transient embryonic and neonatal anemia characterized by pathologic intramitochondrial iron deposits in erythrocytes. Mitochondrial iron accumulation is the hallmark of sideroblastic anemias, which typically result from defects in heme biosynthesis or other pathways that lead to abnormal erythroid mitochondrial iron utilization. To clone the f gene, we used positional cloning techniques, and identified a frameshift mutation in a mitochondrial transmembrane protein. The mutated gene, Sfxn1, is the prototype of a novel family of evolutionarily conserved proteins present in eukaryotes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1