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    Congenital nevi develop before birth and sometimes cover large areas of the body. They are presumed to arise from the acquisition of a gene mutation in an embryonic melanocyte that becomes trapped in the dermis during development. Mice bearing the Cdk4(R24C) ::Tyr-NRAS(Q) (61K) transgenes develop congenital nevus-like lesions by post-natal day 10, from melanocytes escaping the confines of hair follicles. We interbred these mice with the collaborative cross (CC), a resource that enables identification of modifier genes for complex diseases (those where multiple genes are involved). We examined variation in nevus cell density in 66 CC strains and mapped a large-effect quantitative trait locus (QTL) controlling nevus cell density to murine chromosome 9. The best candidate for a gene that exacerbates congenital nevus development in the context of an NRAS mutation is Cdon, a positive regulator of sonic hedgehog (Shh) that is expressed mainly in keratinocytes. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Citation

    Arash Chitsazan, Blake Ferguson, Ramesh Ram, Pamela Mukhopadhyay, Herlina Y Handoko, Brian Gabrielli, Peter H Soyer, Grant Morahan, Graeme J Walker. A mutation in the Cdon gene potentiates congenital nevus development mediated by NRAS(Q61K). Pigment cell & melanoma research. 2016 Jul;29(4):459-64

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    PMID: 27155367

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