NIH LAUNCHES KNOCKOUT MOUSE PROJECT

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
http://www.genome.gov/

National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
http://www.nida.nih.gov/ 

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Thursday, September 7, 2006; 12:01 a.m. ET

CONTACT: Geoff Spencer (NHGRI), 301-402-0911, spencerg@xxxxxxxxxxxx;
Sara Rosario Wilson (NIDA), 301-443-6245, media@xxxxxxxxxxxx 

NIH LAUNCHES KNOCKOUT MOUSE PROJECT
Genome-Wide Public Resource Will Provide New Mouse Models for
Understanding Human Disease

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) today awarded a set of
cooperative agreements, totaling up to $52 million over five years, to
launch the Knockout Mouse Project. The goal of this program is to build
a comprehensive and publicly available resource of knockout mutations in
the mouse genome. The knockout mice produced from this resource will be
extremely useful for the study of human disease.

The NIH Knockout Mouse Project will work closely with other large-scale
efforts to produce knockouts that are underway in Canada, called the
North American Conditional Mouse Mutagenesis Project (NorCOMM), and in
Europe, called the European Conditional Mouse Mutagenesis Program
(EUCOMM). The objective of all these programs is to create a mutation in
each of the approximately 20,000 protein-coding genes in the mouse
genome.

"Knockout mice are powerful tools for exploring the function of genes
and creating animal models of human disease. By enabling more
researchers to study these knockouts, this trans-NIH initiative will
accelerate our efforts to translate basic research findings into new
strategies for improving human health," said NIH Director Elias A.
Zerhouni, M.D. "It is exciting that so many components of NIH have
joined together to support this project, and that the NIH Knockout Mouse
Project will be working hand-in-hand with other international efforts.
This is scientific teamwork at its best."

Knockout mice are lines of mice in which specific genes have been
completely disrupted, or "knocked out." Systematic disruption of each of
the 20,000 genes in the mouse genome will allow researchers to determine
the role of each gene in normal physiology and development. Even more
importantly, researchers will use knockout mice to develop better models
of inherited human diseases such as cancer, heart disease, neurological
disorders, diabetes and obesity. Recent advances in recombinant DNA
technologies, as well as completion of the mouse genome sequence, now
make this project feasible.

NIH today awarded five-year cooperative agreements totaling up to $47.2
million to two groups for the creation of the knockout mice lines.
Recipients of those awards are Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., in
Tarrytown, N.Y., and a collaborative team from Children's Hospital
Oakland Research Institute (CHORI) in Oakland, Calif.; the School of
Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis (UC Davis); and the
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England.

In addition, NIH awarded another five-year cooperative agreement
totaling $2.5 million to the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine for
the establishment of a NIH Knockout Mouse Project data coordination
center. Finally, NIH awarded cooperative agreements to the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and to the Samuel Lunenfeld Research
Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto to improve the efficiency
of methods for creating knockout lines. Those agreements total about
$2.5 million and run for three and two years, respectively.

"Building a genome-wide library of knockouts will require the skills of
researchers from many different disciplines. We are confident that the
multi-institution team we have pulled together will meet that challenge
and deliver this much-needed resource into the hands of the worldwide
research community," said James Battey, M.D., Ph.D., director of the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
and co-chair of the Trans-NIH Genomic Resources Working Group.

To date, academic researchers around the world have created mouse
knockouts of about 4,000 genes. In addition, a random disruption
strategy has been used by the International Gene Trap Consortium to
mutate 8,000 mouse genes. Due to some overlap between these efforts,
about 15,000 genes remain to be knocked out in the mouse genome.

The NIH program, along with NorCOMM and EUCOMM, intend to closely
coordinate their efforts in order to avoid redundancy and maximize the
efficiency of generating knockouts for all genes in the mouse genome.
Furthermore, the U.S., Canadian and European groups are committed to
making their data and resources rapidly and openly available to
researchers around the world.

"The international projects will exchange information and coordinate
their efforts in much the same way that teams from many nations
collaborated on the International Human Genome Project," said Colin
Fletcher, Ph.D., a program director at the National Human Genome
Research Institute (NHGRI), which will oversee administration of three
of the five cooperative agreements that form the core of the Knockout
Mouse Project.

Under its cooperative agreement, the team led by Pieter deJong, Ph.D.,
CHORI, along with K. C. Kent Lloyd, D.V.M., Ph.D., UC Davis; and Allan
Bradley, Ph.D. FRS, and William Skarnes, Ph.D., at the Wellcome Trust
Sanger Institute, plans to systematically create mouse embryonic stem
(ES) cell lines in which 5,000 genes have been knocked out by gene
targeting. The VelociGene division of Regeneron, led by David
Valenzuela, Ph.D. and George D. Yancopoulos, M.D., Ph.D., will take aim
at a different set of 3,500 genes. Both groups will utilize information
from the finished mouse genome sequence to design targeting vectors,
which will be built by large-scale, automated technologies. The combined
collection of mouse ES cells with knockouts in 8,500 genes will be
useful for producing knockout mice.

Other researchers will be able to obtain the ES cells and the vectors,
which can be used to swiftly and efficiently to make live lines of
knockout mice for use in biomedical studies. During the initial phase of
the project, the ES cell lines and vectors used to mutate the genes will
be available from the grantees who produced them. In addition, NIH is
preparing to issue a solicitation for a program to implement a Knockout
Mouse Project repository, which will be funded in the next year and
through which all these materials will be available to the entire
scientific community.

Another crucial component of the effort will be the collection and
coordination of data. Under the leadership of Martin Ringwald, Ph.D.,
the Jackson Laboratory will set up a Data Coordination Center for the
Knockout Mouse Project. The center will collect information that will
allow the research community to track the scheduling and progress of
knockout production. The center will also serve as a central information
resource for all publicly available knockout mutants and will integrate
with other databases that contain mouse DNA sequence, additional
information on mouse genetics and information on the physical and
biochemical characteristics of the knockout mice.

Under two cooperative agreements administered by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Klaus Kaestner, Ph.D., and his colleagues at the
University of Pennsylvania will focus on developing methods to create ES
cell lines suitable for high-throughput gene targeting or trapping in
C57BL/6, the strain of mouse used most widely by the scientific
community. They will be joined in this effort by Andras Nagy, Ph.D., and
his colleagues at the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute. In addition,
Regeneron will receive funds to optimize its existing ES cell line for
the C57BL/6 strain and its proprietary growth medium, both of which will
be supplied to the CHORI-led team for use in the Knockout Mouse Project.

"Development of ES cell lines that can be used to make mutants in the
C57BL/6 strain will be an important step forward in capitalizing on the
vast amount of information obtained from years of research already done
in this mouse strain," said NIDA Director Nora D. Volkow, M.D.

While today's awards mark the official launch of the Knockout Mouse
Project, NIH has been laying the foundation for several years. In the
fall of 2003, NIH co-sponsored an international meeting that concluded
that the time was right for a coordinated effort to produce knockouts in
every mouse gene, and a commentary calling for such a project was
published in the September 2004 issue of "Nature Genetics",
www.genome.gov/Pages/About/RecentArticles/AustinKnockoutMouseCommentary.
pdf.

In October 2005, NIH and the U.K.'s Wellcome Trust took the first
concrete step by awarding contracts that gave academic researchers
access to a set of well-characterized knockout mouse lines created by
Deltagen, Inc. of San Carlos, Calif., and Lexicon Genetics, Inc. of The
Woodlands, Texas. NIH has expended about $11 million to acquire about
250 lines of these mice in the first year of the three-year contracts.
Researchers can obtain information on what knockout mouse lines are
available from this procurement and how to order them at:
http://www.nih.gov/science/models/mouse/deltagenlexicon/list.html.

In June, NIH moved another step closer to its goal of a genome-wide
library of knockout mice with the award of $800,000 to two public mouse
repositories for the acquisition of existing knockout mouse lines that
are not yet widely accessible to researchers. The award recipients were
the Mutant Mouse Regional Resource Centers at UC Davis and the
University of Missouri/Harlan in Columbia, both supported by the
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR). NIH anticipates that more
than 350 existing mouse lines will be deposited and made available to
the research community over the next two years as a result of this
effort. Researchers can obtain information on what knockout mouse lines
are available from this effort and how to order them at:
http://www.mmrrc.org/.

The 19 NIH institutes, centers and offices contributing to the Knockout
Mouse Project are: NCRR, National Eye Institute, NHGRI, National Heart,
Lung and Blood Institute, National Institute on Aging, National
Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development, NIDCD, National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research, NIDA, National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National
Institute of Mental Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Disease, National Cancer Institute, and the Office of AIDS Research.

For more information on the Knockout Mouse Project, go to
www.nih.gov/science/models/mouse/knockout/. For a fact sheet describing
what knockout mice are, how they are made and what they are used for, go
to www.genome.gov/12514551. To download a high-resolution photo of
knockout mice, go to
http://www.genome.gov/pressDisplay.cfm?photoID=5006.  

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the
primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and
translational medical research, and it investigates the causes,
treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
  
##
 
This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/sep2006/nhgri-07a.htm.

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