| Literature DB >> 24431991 |
Pasquale D'Acunzo1, Aurora Badaloni2, Mattia Ferro1, Maddalena Ripamonti1, Vincenzo Zimarino3, Antonio Malgaroli1, G Giacomo Consalez3.
Abstract
In many neurodegenerative disorders, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), synaptic alterations precede the demise of the neuronal cell, making synapses a useful vantage point from which to monitor the onset and progression of clinical signs and pathological changes. While murine models of ALS display many features in common with the clinical picture observed in patients, corticospinal tract (CST) involvement is usually less severe in mice than the picture observed in humans. In this paper we describe the characterization of a new conditional transgenic line obtained by targeted integration of a GFP-VAMP2 fusion gene into the Rosa26 locus, and devised to permit the detection of genetically defined presynaptic terminals in wild type mice and murine models of neural disorders. This reporter molecule is selectively enriched in presynaptic boutons, significantly reducing the background signal produced by fibers of passage. The specific features of this reporter line allow us to strongly support the view that murine CST terminals give rise to very few direct contacts with spinal motor neurons. Moreover, the evidence described here reveals the existence of previously uncharacterized, putative direct connections between CST presynaptic boutons and Renshaw neurons in the spinal cord. These results constitute a proof of concept for the potential application of this indicator line to morphological analyses of wild type and diseased synapses.Entities:
Keywords: GFP labeled; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; axons; neurodegenerative; presynaptic terminals; reporter mouse; synapses; transgenic mice
Year: 2014 PMID: 24431991 PMCID: PMC3882726 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2013.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
FIGURE A2At low resolution, EGFP-VAMP2 (Maiuscolo) signal is detectable in fiber-rich, cell-body-poor territories. (A) Left: LacZ staining of a frontal adult Emx1-Cre Rosa26LacZ/+ mouse forebrain hemisection reveals location of cell bodies (reproduced with permission from Gorski et al., 2002); right: similar section from an Emx1-Cre Rosa26EGFP-VAMP2/+ brain immunostained for EGFP reveals complementary distribution of the reporter, which is enriched in cell-poor regions. (B) Likewise, in a medulla oblongata hemisection, EGFP immunoreactivity is concentrates at the level of the pyramids (inset magnification in C).
FIGURE A1Syn1-Cre is expressed in pontine nuclei but not in cerebellar granule cells. (A) In Syn1-Cre Rosa26-YFP mice, YFP immunoreactivity is detected in pontine nuclei (inset magnification in B). In the cerebellum, YFP immunoreactivity (arrows in C) is detected in calbindin+ Purkinje cells (arrows in C). Large YFP + cell bodies in the granule cell layer (arrow in D) are NeuN negative, likely representing Golgi interneurons. CaBP, calbindin; ovl, overlay; ML, molecular layer; PL, Purkinje cell layer; GL, granule cell layer. Scale bar: (A) 150 μm; (B) 70 μm; (C,D) 75 μm.