A landmark-free morphometrics pipeline for high-resolution phenotyping: application to a mouse model of Down syndrome

Development. 2021 Mar 12;148(18):dev188631. doi: 10.1242/dev.188631.

Abstract

Characterising phenotypes often requires quantification of anatomical shape. Quantitative shape comparison (morphometrics) traditionally uses manually located landmarks and is limited by landmark number and operator accuracy. Here, we apply a landmark-free method to characterise the craniofacial skeletal phenotype of the Dp1Tyb mouse model of Down syndrome and a population of the Diversity Outbred (DO) mouse model, comparing it with a landmark-based approach. We identified cranial dysmorphologies in Dp1Tyb mice, especially smaller size and brachycephaly (front-back shortening), homologous to the human phenotype. Shape variation in the DO mice was partly attributable to allometry (size-dependent shape variation) and sexual dimorphism. The landmark-free method performed as well as, or better than, the landmark-based method but was less labour-intensive, required less user training and, uniquely, enabled fine mapping of local differences as planar expansion or shrinkage. Its higher resolution pinpointed reductions in interior mid-snout structures and occipital bones in both the models that were not otherwise apparent. We propose that this landmark-free pipeline could make morphometrics widely accessible beyond its traditional niches in zoology and palaeontology, especially in characterising developmental mutant phenotypes.

Keywords: Craniofacial; Cranium; Down syndrome; Morphometrics; Mouse model; Phenotyping.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anatomic Landmarks / physiopathology*
  • Animals
  • Body Weights and Measures / methods
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Down Syndrome / physiopathology*
  • Female
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional / methods*
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Phenotype
  • Sex Characteristics
  • Skull / physiopathology