About   Help   FAQ
Phenotypes associated with this allele
Allele Symbol
Allele Name
Allele ID
Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi
targeted mutation 1, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
MGI:4419911
Summary 1 genotype
Jump to Allelic Composition Genetic Background Genotype ID
ot1
Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi/Y B6J.B6N-Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi MGI:6468250


Genotype
MGI:6468250
ot1
Allelic
Composition
Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi/Y
Genetic
Background
B6J.B6N-Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi
Cell Lines EPD0411_7_H02
Find Mice Using the International Mouse Strain Resource (IMSR)
Mouse lines carrying:
Nexmiftm1(KOMP)Wtsi mutation (0 available); any Nexmif mutation (54 available)
phenotype observed in females
phenotype observed in males
N normal phenotype
mortality/aging
• severe seizures can result in fatalities at 6 months or later

behavior/neurological
• mice exhibit autism-like behaviors including reduced social interaction, increased repetitive self-grooming, and deficits in communication and in learning and memory
• on day 2, mice show a significant deficit in hippocampal-based, contextual fear memory with an increase in the motion index and a decrease in the time spent freezing (%) across trial blocks relative to wild-type controls
• mice show a significant deficit in amygdala-dependent, cued fear memory with no significant change in the time spent freezing (%) after playing the cue (tone) relative to their pretone (baseline) activity
• in the Barnes maze spatial memory test, mice are slower to use direct searches to find the target escape hole relative to wild-type controls, but do make progress in making more direct searches over the training sessions
• although mice use increasingly more direct searches during training, they still use serial searches significantly more than wild-type controls
• in the 5 day probe of the Barnes maze test, mice show impaired memory of the escape hole location with significantly less nose pokes at the target and adjacent holes and a broader search of the board than wild-type controls
• mice take significantly longer to find the target hole and travel much longer before making an initial nose poke at the target hole than wild-type controls in both the 24 hour and the 5 day tests
• in the open-field test, mice spend significantly less time in the center than wild-type controls, suggesting increased anxiety
• adult mice bury significantly fewer marbles than wild-type control across all time points during a 25 min observation period, suggesting a reduced interest in the external environment
• mice exhibit a ~3-fold increase in the time spent self-grooming and in the number of grooming episodes
• in the open-field test, mice show significantly increased total track lengths and mean velocities relative to wild-type controls
• mice show increased repetitive self-grooming behavior
• in the 3-chamber social task, mice spend significantly less time interacting with a stranger mouse (Mouse 1) compared with the empty cage; the preference index for Mouse 1 is significantly decreased, indicating impaired sociability
• in the 3-chamber social task, mice show no preference for a second mouse (Novel Mouse) placed into the remaining empty chamber opposite to Mouse 1; the preference index for Novel Mouse vs Mouse 1 is significantly decreased, indicating reduced interest in social novelty
• ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) are generally simpler with significantly more short and flat calls and fewer modulated and multiple jump calls relative to those made by wild-type controls, suggesting impaired communication
• however, no significant changes in average peak amplitude or peak frequency are observed at any point
• mean call syllable duration and total time spent calling are significantly reduced at all developmental time points tested
• analysis of USVs revealed a significant reduction in the total number of calls at P5, P7 and P9, as well as fewer calls emitted within each minute of the 5 min recording period at each developmental time point
• mice begin to exhibit severe seizures as early as 3 months of age, typically in response to animal handling; most seizures begin at >4 months
• some seizures result in fatalities at 6 months or later

nervous system
• mice begin to exhibit severe seizures as early as 3 months of age, typically in response to animal handling; most seizures begin at >4 months
• some seizures result in fatalities at 6 months or later
• hippocampal and cortical brain lysates show a significant decrease in the protein expression of AMPAR subunit GluA1, the GABAAreceptor alpha1 subunit, and the inhibitory synaptic scaffolding protein gephyrin, with no changes in PSD-95 or synapsin expression
• immunostaining confirmed a marked decrease in total GluA1 staining intensity in P0 hippocampal brain slices
• at P90, hippocampal pyramidal neurons show a 35% reduction in the density of dendritic protrusions relative to wild-type neurons
• at P90, hippocampal pyramidal neurons show a 33% increase in the average length of dendritic protrusions relative to wild-type neurons
• at P90, hippocampal pyramidal neurons show significantly less stubby spines relative to wild-type neurons
• at P90, hippocampal pyramidal neurons show a significant increase in filopodia and thin protrusions relative to wild-type neurons
• at P90, hippocampal pyramidal neurons show a significant increase in filopodia and thin protrusions with less stubby spines (indicating a reduction in mature spines), a 35% reduction in the density of dendritic protrusions and a 33% increase in the average length of protrusions relative to wild-type neurons
• in acute hippocampal slices, paired-pulse ratio is markedly higher than in wild-type controls, esp. at high-frequency stimulation, indicating abnormalities in presynaptic function
• analysis of the input/output relationship at CA3-CA1 synapses revealed a reduction in excitatory synaptic strength, indicating reduced basal synaptic transmission
• fEPSP recordings from hippocampal brain slices revealed an increase in paired-pulse facilitation

integument
• mice exhibit patches of fur loss due to excessive repetitive self-grooming behavior in the same body areas
• when grouped-housed with wild-type controls, mice display fur loss on the chest





Contributing Projects:
Mouse Genome Database (MGD), Gene Expression Database (GXD), Mouse Models of Human Cancer database (MMHCdb) (formerly Mouse Tumor Biology (MTB)), Gene Ontology (GO)
Citing These Resources
Funding Information
Warranty Disclaimer, Privacy Notice, Licensing, & Copyright
Send questions and comments to User Support.
last database update
04/23/2024
MGI 6.23
The Jackson Laboratory