| Literature DB >> 28018166 |
João M Da Conceição Alves-Cruzeiro1, Liliana Mendonça1, Luís Pereira de Almeida2, Clévio Nóbrega3.
Abstract
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) is an autosomal dominant ataxia caused by an expansion of CAG repeats in the exon 1 of the gene ATXN2, conferring a gain of toxic function that triggers the appearance of the disease phenotype. SCA2 is characterized by several symptoms including progressive gait ataxia and dysarthria, slow saccadic eye movements, sleep disturbances, cognitive impairments, and psychological dysfunctions such as insomnia and depression, among others. The available treatments rely on palliative care, which mitigate some of the major symptoms but ultimately fail to block the disease progression. This persistent lack of effective therapies led to the development of several models in yeast, C. elegans, D. melanogaster, and mice to serve as platforms for testing new therapeutic strategies and to accelerate the research on the complex disease mechanisms. In this work, we review 4 transgenic and 1 knock-in mouse that exhibit a SCA2-related phenotype and discuss their usefulness in addressing different scientific problems. The knock-in mice are extremely faithful to the human disease, with late onset of symptoms and physiological levels of mutant ataxin-2, while the other transgenic possess robust and well-characterized motor impairments and neuropathological features. Furthermore, a new BAC model of SCA2 shows promise to study the recently explored role of non-coding RNAs as a major pathogenic mechanism in this devastating disorder. Focusing on specific aspects of the behavior and neuropathology, as well as technical aspects, we provide a highly practical description and comparison of all the models with the purpose of creating a useful resource for SCA2 researchers worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: knock-in; motor impairments; mouse; neuropathology; spinocerebellar ataxia type 2; transgenic
Year: 2016 PMID: 28018166 PMCID: PMC5156697 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2016.00572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Molecular mechanisms proposed to be involved in SCA2 pathogenesis. The anti-sense transcription of the ATXN2 gene gives origin to the repeat-expanded ATXN2-AS, with the ability to form hairpin structures and induce toxicity. The sense transcription encodes to the polyQ-expanded ataxin-2 protein, which assembles in insoluble, not always ubiquitinated cytoplasmic aggregates, and recruits other proteins like E3 ubiquitin ligases. Ultimately, the UPS might get overburden, disturbing the neuronal protein turnover and engaging in aberrant proteolytic cleavage, with the formation of N-terminal PolyQ-containing toxic fragments. Also, the mutated ataxin-2 decreases the ability of WT ataxin-2 to stabilize mRNAs and upregulate protein expression, resulting in transcriptional and translational dysregulations. On the other hand, the expanded polyQ protein binds to receptors in the ER and promotes a significant increase in intracellular calcium and, consequently, excitotoxicity, and enhanced LTD in cerebellar PCs. Finally, posttranslational modifications such as phosphorylation at specific residues might modulate the toxicity of ataxin-2, and RAN translation can result in additional polyalanine and/or polyserine toxic proteins. Blue, solid line boxes represent well-studied disease mechanisms, with extensive supporting evidence in SCA2. Black, dashed line boxes represent pathogenic mechanisms that are well established in other PolyQ disorders like HD and other SCAs, but whose relevance to SCA2 is still unclear.
Behavioral analysis of SCA2 mouse models.
| Q58 | NA | Yes | 16 | Yes | 16 | Yes | 32 | Yes | 32 | |
| Q75 | NA | Yes | 6 | NA | NA | NA | ||||
| Q42KI | Yes | 1 | Yes | 72 | NE | NA | NA | |||
| Q127 | NA | Yes | 8 | NA | NA | NA | ||||
| BAC-Q72 | Yes | 8 | Yes | 16 | NA | NA | NA |
Behavioral hallmarks of the mouse models of SCA2. For each model, the symptoms/characteristics are included as existent (“Yes”), non-existent (“NE”), or Not available (“NA”), with the corresponding age of onset.
Neuropathology of SCA2 mouse models.
| Q58 | Loss of calbindin-28K immunoreactivity | 4 | Decreased PCs number | 24 | No NIs. Cytoplasmic microaggregates | NA | Decrease in the number of firing PCs | 24 | ||
| Reduced firing frequency of PCs | ||||||||||
| Q75 | Loss of calbindin-28K immunoreactivity | 52 | NA | NA | Loss of dendrites in PCs. Shrinkage of cell bodies in PCs | 52 | NA | |||
| Q42KI | NE | NE | No NIs. Cytoplasmic insoluble aggregates | 56 | NA | NA | ||||
| Q127 | NA | Decreased PCs number | 40 | Perinuclear aggregates | 4 | Loss of molecular layer thickness | 12 | Slower firing frequency of PCs | 6 | |
| BAC-Q72 | Loss of calbindin-28K immunoreactivity | 24 | NE | NA | Shrinkage of dendritic trees in PCs | NA |
Neuropathological hallmarks of the mouse models of SCA2. For each model, a small description of its neuropathology and the corresponding age of onset is provided. NIs, Nuclear inclusions; NA, Not available; NE, Non-existent.
The major advantages and downsides of SCA2 mouse models.
| Q58 | Q58-11 | Robust, well-characterized behavioral impairments and neuropathology; | Unable to study other brain regions: targeted expression to PCs; |
| Suitable to study PCs dysfunction; | Non-physiological expression levels of ataxin-2—overexpression; | ||
| Practical for research into new therapeutic strategies; | Pronuclear injection: random integration; | ||
| Q75 | F066 | Ubiquitous expression of mutant ataxin-2; | Pronuclear injection: random integration; |
| Integrated only 1 or 2 copies of the transgene; | Lack of control transgenic line; | ||
| Early onset of symptoms and robust motor impairment—practical in testing for new therapies; | No other symptom besides motor incoordination; | ||
| Q42 KI | CAG42 | Very faithful to the human condition in terms of physiological expression levels and age of onset; | Mild ataxia phenotype and neuropathology with late onset of symptoms; |
| Ideal to study early differential gene expression levels; | Unpractical for testing new therapies that alleviate symptoms; | ||
| Potential to find disease biomarkers; | |||
| Targeted insertion; | |||
| Q127 | ATXN2Q127 | Very robust impairments in behavior and neuropathology with early onset of symptoms; | Unable to study other brain regions: targeted expression to PCs; |
| Suitable to study electrophysiological dysfunctions in PCs and testing new therapies; | Decreased faithfulness to the human disease; | ||
| Pronuclear injection: random integration; | |||
| BAC-Q72 | BAC-ATXN2-Q72 | The entire gene (introns included) was inserted into the mouse genome: suitable to study RNA-related mechanisms; | No other symptoms besides motor incoordination; |
| Ubiquitous expression of mutant ataxin-2; | Mild neuropathology; |
The major advantages and disadvantages of SCA2 mouse models. For each mutant mouse line, the most notorious upsides and downsides are given to facilitate the choice of the most adequate model addressing different biological questions.