| Literature DB >> 30072871 |
Ahmed Eltokhi1,2,3, Gudrun Rappold2, Rolf Sprengel1,3.
Abstract
The SHANK scaffolding proteins are important organizers for signaling proteins in the postsynapse of excitatory neurons. The functional significance of SHANK proteins becomes apparent by the wide spectrum of neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders associated with SHANK variants in human patients. A similar diversity of neuropsychiatric-like phenotypes is described for numerous Shank2 and Shank3 knockout (KO) mouse lines. In this review, we will focus on and discuss the experimental results obtained from different, but genetically related and therefore comparable, Shank2 mouse models. First, we will describe the distinct SHANK2 variant-mediated neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders in human patients. Then we will discuss the current knowledge of the expressed SHANK2 isoforms in the mouse, and we will describe the genetic strategies used for generating three conventional and seven conditional Shank2 mouse lines. The distinct impairments i.e., autistic-like and mania-like behavior and the alterations on the molecular, electrophysiological and behavioral levels will be compared between the different Shank2 mouse models. We will present our view as to why in these mouse models a spectrum of phenotypes can arise from similar Shank2 gene manipulations and how Shank2 mutant mice can be used and should be analyzed on the behavioral level in future research.Entities:
Keywords: SHANK2 domains; SHANK2 gene variants; SHANK2 isoforms; Shank2 knockout mice; autism spectrum disorder; behavioral tests; intellectual disability; schizophrenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30072871 PMCID: PMC6060255 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2018.00240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Genetically modified mouse lines encoding gene-targeted mutations of endogenous Shank genes and one transgenic mouse line expressing a SHANK3-GFP that are made available to public in the mouse genome informatics database (http://www.informatics.jax.org).
Mouse lines in blue are not published but commercially available.
Figure 1Gene structure and gene segment deletions in gene-targeted Shank mouse models. Structures of the mouse Shank1, Shank2 and Shank3 genes are depicted. Exons are given in rectangles; alternative spliced exons are in dashed lines. Positions of promoters (Pr) for the expression of the different isoforms of the Shank1–3 gene loci are indicated. Positions of the neomycin (neo) selection marker, loxP, lox2722 and Frt sites in the targeted alleles are indicated. Targeted gene segments flanked by two loxP or two lox2722 elements can be removed or inverted by tissue-specific expression of Cre to generate a conditional Shank knockout (KO) or Shank knockin mouse models. neo = selection marker, sense orientation; oen = neo selection marker, reverse orientation. References for the first publication of the mouse lines are given. FERM (F for 4.1 protein, E for ezrin, R for radixin and M for moesin), ANK (ankyrin repeat domain), SH3 (Src homology 3), PDZ (PSD-95/Discs large/zona occludens), SAM (sterile alpha motife). (Hung et al., 2008; Bozdagi et al., 2010; Peca et al., 2011; Wang et al., 2011, 2016; Schmeisser et al., 2012; Won et al., 2012; Kouser et al., 2013; Lee J. et al., 2015; Speed et al., 2015; Ha et al., 2016; Jaramillo et al., 2016, 2017; Mei et al., 2016; Peter et al., 2016; Zhou et al., 2016; Pappas et al., 2017).
Five single point mutations in the coding region (c.) of the SHANK2 gene leading to five amino acid residue exchanges (p.) that are associated with different neuropsychiatric disorders.
| Point mutation | Amino acid residue exchange | Number of patients | Diagnosis | Transmission source | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| c.1604A >G | p.K535R | 2 | 1 ASD | n.a | Berkel et al. ( |
| 1 ID | n.a | ||||
| c.1730C >T | p.A577V | 7 | 5 SCZ | Mother | Homann et al. ( |
| 1 Schizotypal personality | Mother | ||||
| 1 Schizoaffective | Mother | ||||
| c.1759C >T | p.P587S | 2 | 1 Autism | Mother | Berkel et al. ( |
| 1 ID | n.a | ||||
| c.1829C >A | p.S610Y | 2 | 1 Catatonic SCZ | n.a | Berkel et al. ( |
| 1 ID with Autistic features | Father | Peykov et al. ( | |||
| c.5191G >T | p.A1731S | 4 | 3 Paranoid SCZ | Mother | Peykov et al. ( |
| 1 Disorganized SCZ | Mother |
ASD, Autism spectrum disorder; ID, Intellectual disability; SCZ, Schizophrenia; n.a., not available. (NCBI reference sequence: NM_012309.4; for the full list of identified SHANK2 variants in patients, see supplementary information).
Figure 2SHANK2 isoforms in the rat evaluated by direct cDNA cloning. (Top) Schematic view of different conserved protein domains in SHANK2 isoforms. (Bottom) Amino acid residue sequence alignment of the SHANK2E (AY298755; Han et al., 2006), SHANK2A (AJ249562; Boeckers et al., 1999a) and SHANK2B (AF060116 or AJ131899; Du et al., 1998; Boeckers et al., 1999b) isoforms. (Bottom) Amino acid residue sequence alignment of the SHANK2E (AY298755; Han et al., 2006), SHANK2A (AJ249562; Boeckers et al., 1999a) and SHANK2B (AF060116 or AJ131899; Du et al., 1998; Boeckers et al., 1999b) isoforms. The SHANK2 protein domains are color-coded. The positions of the introns in the coding regions are indicated by vertical black lines. Exons are numbered starting with exon 2 as the first translated exon. N-terminal amino acid residues of isoform A and B are given in red. The sequences inside the brown rectangles are absent in some other Shank2 transcripts. The N-terminal sequence of isoform A is encoded by the three terminal end of intron 10. The N-terminal sequence of isoform B is encoded in intron 14. Isoform C which is found in humans cannot be detected in mouse or rat mRNAs.
Distinct endophenotypes in genetically very similar gene-manipulated, conventional Shank2 knockout mice.
Figure 3Putative pre-mRNA transcripts in homozygous Shank2 KO mice. Schematic view of the Shank2 gene and the putative pre-mRNA that can be expressed by the four different gene-targeted alleles of the Shank2 mouse models with very distinct phenotypes. Symbols are as in Figure 2.
Summary of behavioral tests that can be used in the test battery for Shank2 mouse models and other mice with potential neuropsychiatric-like phenotype.
| Targeted domain | Behavioral tests | Targeted domain | Behavioral tests |
|---|---|---|---|
SHIRPA | Circadian rhythm in running wheel Videotaped observations of home cage sleep and activity patterns | ||
Locomotor activity in the home cage Locomotor activity in the open field | Sensitivity to audiogenic seizures Sensitivity to drug-induced seizures | ||
Elevated plus-maze Elevated zero-maze Dark-light compartment Open field Marble burying Shock-probe burying Vogel conflict test Hyponeophagia | Forced swim test Tail-suspension test Visible Burrow System Learned helplessness test Sucrose preference task Circadian rhythm Social interaction Sexual behavior | ||
Rotarod Running wheel Open field Horizontal bar Static rods Parallel bars Mouse cylinder test Elevated bridge Swim test Staircase test Hanging wire test Hind-paw footprint test Balance beam test Erasmus ladder test Eye-blink conditioning test Cliff avoidance test 5-Choice serial reaction time task Stop-signal reaction time task | Novel object recognition task Morris water maze Fear conditioning Pre-pulse inhibition Mazes (Barnes, Radial, Y and T) Hole-board Odorant-based tasks Operant conditioning 5-Choice serial reaction time task Set-shifting task Latent inhibition test Social transmission of food preference task Eye-blink conditioning | ||
Acoustic startle Tactile startle Hot plate | |||
Hole-board Marble burying Reversal learning in the Morris water maze or Y-maze Self-grooming Motor stereotypies (rearing and jumping) | Von Frey hairs Attentional neglect tape test Resident-intruder test Isolation-induced fighting Tube test | ||
3-chamber social test Direct social interaction Social conditioned place preference task Operant conditioning Partition test Visible Burrow System Juvenile play Whisker trimming Nest building USV during social interaction USV by separated pups Retrieval of separated pups Olfactory habituation/dishabituation measures Tube test |