Our study reports a novel dominant COL1A1 mutation in OI. Using a zebrafish model, we confirmed that the glycine to serine substitution at position 608 of the COL1A1 protein has deleterious effects on bone development.Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), also known as brittle bone disease, is a group of genetic disorders. Mutations in two genes, collagen type I alpha 1 chain (COL1A1) and collagen type I alpha 1 chain (COL1A2), which encode the pro-a1 (I) and pro-a2 (I) chains of type I collagen, respectively, the most abundant form of collagen in the human body, cause most cases of OI.In this study, we used panel-based next-generation sequencing for prenatal diagnosis of a fetus whose ultrasound images suggested OI. A de novo mutation in COL1A1 gene was suspected to cause the phenotype. To validate the effect of this mutation in a zebrafish model, we constructed a plasmid containing the corresponding mutation in the zebrafish gene col1a1a (c.1744 G > A), and overexpressed the mutant protein in zebrafish larvae.We identified a novel COL1A1 mutation (c.1822 G > A; p.Gly608Ser) in the fetus but not in her parents by an skeletal dysplasias panel. Bioinformatic analysis showed that the affected residue (p.Gly608) is highly conserved from zebrafish to humans. In contrast to larvae expressing wild-type (WT) col1a1a and enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), col1a1a mutation-expressing larvae showed significant spinal curvature and embryonic lethality, mimicking the phenotype of human OI.Our study revealed the pathogenicity of a de novo mutation, c.1822 G > A, in human COL1A1, which expands the mutation spectrum of OI.