[PDF][PDF] Zebrafish dracula encodes ferrochelatase and its mutation provides a model for erythropoietic protoporphyria

S Childs, BM Weinstein, MAPK Mohideen, S Donohue… - Current Biology, 2000 - cell.com
S Childs, BM Weinstein, MAPK Mohideen, S Donohue, H Bonkovsky, MC Fishman
Current Biology, 2000cell.com
Exposure to light precipitates the symptoms of several genetic disorders that affect both skin
and internal organs. It is presumed that damage to non-cutaneous organs is initiated
indirectly by light, but this is difficult to study in mammals. Zebrafish have an essentially
transparent periderm for the first days of development. In a previous large-scale genetic
screen we isolated a mutation, dracula (drc), which manifested as a light-dependent lysis of
red blood cells [1]. We report here that protoporphyrin IX accumulates in the mutant …
Abstract
Exposure to light precipitates the symptoms of several genetic disorders that affect both skin and internal organs. It is presumed that damage to non-cutaneous organs is initiated indirectly by light, but this is difficult to study in mammals. Zebrafish have an essentially transparent periderm for the first days of development. In a previous large-scale genetic screen we isolated a mutation, dracula (drc), which manifested as a light-dependent lysis of red blood cells [1]. We report here that protoporphyrin IX accumulates in the mutant embryos, suggesting a deficiency in the activity of ferrochelatase, the terminal enzyme in the pathway for heme biosynthesis. We find that homozygous drcm248 mutant embryos have a G→T transversion at a splice donor site in the ferrochelatase gene, creating a premature stop codon. The mutant phenotype, which shows light-dependent hemolysis and liver disease, is similar to that seen in humans with erythropoietic protoporphyria, a disorder of ferrochelatase.
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