| Literature DB >> 30402338 |
Ming-Kai Pan1, Chun-Lun Ni2, Yeuh-Chi Wu2, Yong-Shi Li2, Sheng-Han Kuo2.
Abstract
Background: Tremor is the most common movement disorder; however, the pathophysiology of tremor remains elusive. While several neuropathological alterations in tremor disorders have been observed in post-mortem studies of human brains, a full understanding of the relationship between brain circuitry alterations and tremor requires testing in animal models. Additionally, tremor animal models are critical for our understanding of tremor pathophysiology, and/or to serve as a platform for therapy development.Entities:
Keywords: Essential tremor; Parkinson’s disease; Purkinje cells; cerebellum; climbing fiber; dystonia; tremor
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30402338 PMCID: PMC6214818 DOI: 10.7916/D89S37MV
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Search Strategy
| Key Words and Combination | Number of Publications | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Tremor AND Animal models | Total | Included | Excluded |
| Tremor AND mouse | 194 | 12 | 182 (not in English, 9; not relevant, 173) |
| Tremor AND rat | 413 | 37 | 376 (not in English, 15; not relevant, 361) |
| Tremor AND monkey | 470 | 15 | 455 (not in English, 31; not relevant, 424) |
| Total number of articles included for review | 94 | 4 | 90 (not in English, 9; not relevant, 81) |
| Total number of articles included from the references of the including articles | 68 | ||
| Final number of articles included for review | 5 | ||
| 73 | |||
Figure 1Search Strategy. Flow diagram for the literature search results.
Figure 2Characteristics of Harmaline-Induced Tremor in Mice. (A) A representative time-frequency plot of harmaline-induced mouse tremor, which shows that harmaline can induce action tremor at the peak frequency around 13–15 Hz. The tremor was induced by a single intraperitoneal injection of harmaline hydrochloride (Sigma) at 5 mg/kg into a WT C57BL/6J mouse, and the mouse tremor was measured using Convuls-1 sensing platform (Columbus Instruments), co-registered with a video-based motion detection (NeuroMotive, BlackRock microsystem) to separate action vs. rest tremor. (B) The quantification of movement intensity at different frequency, showing that tremor occurs at action but minimal at rest in harmaline-induced tremor mouse model.
Figure 3Brain Circuitry for Tremor. Schematics for the brain circuitry involved in the tremor of animal models. The brain circuitry alterations in each animal model of tremor are highlighted. CF, Climbing Fiber; DCN, Deep Cerebellar Nucleus; IO, Inferior Olive; PC, Purkinje Cell; VL, Ventrolateral Nucleus of the Thalamus.
Chemical- or Lesion-induced Animal Models of Tremor
| Chemical/Lesion | Tremor Type and Frequency (Hz) | Tremor Measurement | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Harmaline-induced | 10–16 Hz body tremor | Force plate-based measurement | 19 |
| 6-OHDA-induced | 4–5 Hz body tremor | Electromyography or force plate-based measurement | 44 | |
| Galantamine-induced | Oral tremor (3–7.5 Hz frequency range, with a peak frequency of approximately 6 Hz) | Observation | 69 | |
| Oxotremorine-induced and arecoline-induced | Tremor | Multiple electrical physiological signals real-time analyzer | 70 | |
| Phenol-induced | Tremor | Observation | 71 | |
| Pilocarpine-induced | Oral tremor | Observation | 72 | |
| Rat | Harmaline-induced | 8–12 Hz body tremor | Force plate-based measurement | 19 |
| Chlordecone-induced | Tremor | Force plate setting | 73 | |
| Ethanol withdrawal physostigmine-induced, arecoline-induced | Tremor(6–7 Hz)tremor (11–13 Hz) tremor (peak of 13 Hz) | Objective measure, not detailed in method | 74 | |
| Nicotine-induced | Tremor | Observation | 75 | |
| p-Chloroamphetamine-induced | Tremor | Observation | 76 | |
| p,p'-DDT-induced | Tremor | Observation | 77 | |
| Tacrine-induced | Oral tremor | Observation | 78 | |
| Monkey | MPTP-induced | 5–7 Hz limb tremor | Accelerometer | 43 |
| Electrical coagulation of the brainstem area including the substantia nigra and the red nucleus | Resting tremor (stable frequency of 4.46 ± 0.59 Hz) | An accelerometer connected to a computer system | 79 | |
| Repeated electrode penetration of the dentate and interpositus nuclei | Change the physiological tremor frequency from 11–13 Hz to 5–7 Hz | EMG | 80 | |
| Partial cerebellectomy (including unilateral DCN) | Tremor | EMG | 81 |
Abbreviations: EMG, Electromyography; DCN, Deep Cerebellar Nucleus.
Genetic Animal Models of Tremor
| Gene/Lesion | Tremor Type (Hz) | Tremor Measure | Ataxia/Others | Cerebellar Pathology/Physiology | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Tremor (4–14 Hz) | Tremor monitor (San Diego instruments) | Ataxia | Microzonal organization defects, abnormal Purkinje cell firing | 53 | |
| Intention tremor | Observation | Ataxia | 83 | |||
| Tremor | Observation | Ataxia | 84 | |||
| Tremor | Observation | Abnormal motor coordination | 85 | |||
| GABAA α1 subunit knockout | Tremor (15–19 Hz) | Tremor measured by suspending the tail and attached to the stereo speaker | Absent spontaneous GABAergic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials | 66 | ||
| Tremor | Observation | Motor impairment, hyperactivity, impaired learning and memory | 86 | |||
| Tremor | Observation | Ataxia and dystonia | Impaired repetitive firing of Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices | 87 | ||
| Tremor | Observation | Loss of extension reflex in hind-limbs, decreased grip strength and paralysis | 88 | |||
| Tremor | Observation | Ataxia and absence seizures | 89 | |||
| Tremor (4–14 Hz) | Tremor monitor (San Diego instruments) | Dystonia | Abnormal Purkinje cell simple spike firing (Silencing climbing fiber synaptic transmission) | 90 | ||
| Tremor | Observation | Abnormal gait | Purkinje cell degeneration | 91 | ||
| Tremor | Observation | Motor incoordination and a wide hindlimb gait | Purkinje cell loss and cerebellar atrophy | 92 | ||
| Intention tremor | Observation | hypomyelination of the cerebellum and spongiform degeneration in the deep cerebellar nuclei | 93 | |||
| Action tremor | Observation | Waddling gait | Reduced number of Purkinje cells and granule cells | 94 | ||
| Tremor | Observation | Ataxia | Purkinje cell degeneration | 95 | ||
| Body tremor | Observation | Abnormal gait | 96 | |||
| Action tremor | Observation | Ataxia | Purkinje cell loss | 97 | ||
| Head tremor | Observation | Unsteady gait and muscle atrophy | 98 | |||
| Tremor | Observation | Ataxia and hypertonia | 99 | |||
| Rat | Generalized tremor (especially the caudal body) that peaks between 4–8 weeks and gradually subsides | Observation | Abnormal myelin-associated vacuoles in the white matter of cerebellum | 100 | ||
| Tremor (4–5 Hz) | Force plate-based measurement | Ataxia | Purkinje cell degeneration | 60 | ||
| Whole body tremor, responsive to propranolol | Observation | 102 | ||||
| Hamster | Tremor | Observation | Defective myelination in the central nervous system | 101 |