TY - JOUR
T1 - Generation and characterization of Dyt1 ΔgAG knock-in mouse as a model for early-onset dystonia
AU - Dang, Mai T.
AU - Yokoi, Fumiaki
AU - McNaught, Kevin St P.
AU - Jengelley, Toni Ann
AU - Jackson, Tehone
AU - Li, Jianyong
AU - Li, Yuqing
N1 - Funding Information:
We express our thanks to Shinichi Mitsui, Morgan Pence, Krupa Patel, Jieun Jun, and Robert Yuen for their technical assistance and Yanyan Wang and Gary Iwamoto for helpful discussions. This work was supported by funds from the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation, Bachmann–Strauss Dystonia and Parkinson Foundation, Inc., the State of Illinois, and the Lucille P. Markey Charitable Trust. Behavioral equipment was funded by the Research Board of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the Beckman Foundation, and the Beckman Institute. MD was supported in part by an institutional NIH Systems and Integrative Biology Training Grant (T32 GM007143). FY was on leave from the faculty of Saga Medical School, Japan and was supported in part by Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology.
PY - 2005/12
Y1 - 2005/12
N2 - A trinucleotide deletion of GAG in the DYT1 gene that encodes torsinA protein is implicated in the neurological movement disorder of Oppenheim's early-onset dystonia. The mutation removes a glutamic acid in the carboxy region of torsinA, a member of the Clp protease/heat shock protein family. The function of torsinA and the role of the mutation in causing dystonia are largely unknown. To gain insight into these unknowns, we made a gene-targeted mouse model of Dyt1 ΔGAG to mimic the mutation found in DYT1 dystonic patients. The mutated heterozygous mice had deficient performance on the beam-walking test, a measure of fine motor coordination and balance. In addition, they exhibited hyperactivity in the open-field test. Mutant mice also showed a gait abnormality of increased overlap. Mice at 3 months of age did not display deficits in beam-walking and gait, while 6-month mutant mice did, indicating an age factor in phenotypic expression as well. While striatal dopamine and 4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) levels in Dyt1 ΔGAG mice were similar to that of wild-type mice, a 27% decrease in 4-hydroxy, 3-methoxyphenacetic acid (homovanillic acid) was detected in mutant mice. Dyt1 ΔGAG tissues also have ubiquitin- and torsinA-containing aggregates in neurons of the pontine nuclei. A sex difference was noticed in the mutant mice with female mutant mice exhibiting fewer alterations in behavioral, neurochemical, and cellular changes. Our results show that knocking in a Dyt1 ΔGAG allele in mouse alters their motor behavior and recapitulates the production of protein aggregates that are seen in dystonic patients. Our data further support alterations in the dopaminergic system as a part of dystonia's neuropathology.
AB - A trinucleotide deletion of GAG in the DYT1 gene that encodes torsinA protein is implicated in the neurological movement disorder of Oppenheim's early-onset dystonia. The mutation removes a glutamic acid in the carboxy region of torsinA, a member of the Clp protease/heat shock protein family. The function of torsinA and the role of the mutation in causing dystonia are largely unknown. To gain insight into these unknowns, we made a gene-targeted mouse model of Dyt1 ΔGAG to mimic the mutation found in DYT1 dystonic patients. The mutated heterozygous mice had deficient performance on the beam-walking test, a measure of fine motor coordination and balance. In addition, they exhibited hyperactivity in the open-field test. Mutant mice also showed a gait abnormality of increased overlap. Mice at 3 months of age did not display deficits in beam-walking and gait, while 6-month mutant mice did, indicating an age factor in phenotypic expression as well. While striatal dopamine and 4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) levels in Dyt1 ΔGAG mice were similar to that of wild-type mice, a 27% decrease in 4-hydroxy, 3-methoxyphenacetic acid (homovanillic acid) was detected in mutant mice. Dyt1 ΔGAG tissues also have ubiquitin- and torsinA-containing aggregates in neurons of the pontine nuclei. A sex difference was noticed in the mutant mice with female mutant mice exhibiting fewer alterations in behavioral, neurochemical, and cellular changes. Our results show that knocking in a Dyt1 ΔGAG allele in mouse alters their motor behavior and recapitulates the production of protein aggregates that are seen in dystonic patients. Our data further support alterations in the dopaminergic system as a part of dystonia's neuropathology.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=27744567561&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2005.08.025
DO - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2005.08.025
M3 - Article
C2 - 16242683
AN - SCOPUS:27744567561
SN - 0014-4886
VL - 196
SP - 452
EP - 463
JO - Experimental Neurology
JF - Experimental Neurology
IS - 2
ER -