Fig. 2 | Nature Communications

Fig. 2

From: Humanising the mouse genome piece by piece

Fig. 2The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI.

How far to humanise. A summary of considerations when deciding on the extent of targeted genomic humanisation for a given gene of interest. Dark green boxes represent exons, lines between exons are introns, light green boxes are UTRs and blue regions represent humanisation. a Partial humanisation typically involves humanising specific residues and/or domains of interest. Fine-scale humanisation of specific amino-acid residues can be performed in isolation if they have known biochemical differences from mouse to human, or if only a small number of residues need to be altered to achieve a human protein sequence. Specific domains or exons can be humanised if, for example, they are known to be critical for human disease. Examples of translated protein products are given. b Full humanisation involves humanising the whole gene, including introns, to attain translation of the full human protein, potentially including human-specific splicing patterns, and for maximum translational potential. 5ʹ and 3ʹ-UTRs, promoters, and other regulatory sequences can be included, on a case-by-case basis, if understanding of gene regulation is the question at hand, if gene clusters are to be humanised or if pathogenic mutations fall within such flanking regions

Back to article page