| Literature DB >> 31667540 |
Lukasz Piszczek1,2, Simone Memoli3, Angelo Raggioli3, José Viosca3,4, Jeanette Rientjes5, Philip Hublitz3,6, Weronika Czaban3, Anna Wyrzykowska3, Cornelius Gross7.
Abstract
Genetic factors play a significant role in risk for mood and anxiety disorders. Polymorphisms in genes that regulate the brain monoamine systems, such as catabolic enzymes and transporters, are attractive candidates for being risk factors for emotional disorders given the weight of evidence implicating monoamines involvement in these conditions. Several common genetic variants have been identified in the human serotonin transporter (5-HTT) gene, including a repetitive sequence located in the promoter region of the locus called the serotonin transporter-linked polymorphic region (5-HTT-LPR). This polymorphism has been associated with a number of mental traits in both humans and primates, including depression, neuroticism, and harm avoidance. Some, but not all, studies found a link between the polymorphism and 5-HTT levels, leaving open the question of whether the polymorphism affects risk for mental traits via changes in 5-HTT expression. To investigate the impact of the polymorphism on gene expression, serotonin homeostasis, and behavioral traits, we set out to develop a mouse model of the human 5-HTT-LPR. Here we describe the creation and characterization of a set of mouse lines with single-copy human transgenes carrying the short and long 5-HTT-LPR variants. Although we were not able to detect differences in expression between the short and long variants, we encountered several technical issues concerning the design of our humanized mice that are likely to have influenced our findings. Our study serves as a cautionary note for future studies aimed at studying human transgene regulation in the context of the living mouse.Entities:
Keywords: 5-HTT; 5-HTT-LPR; Mouse models; Serotonin
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31667540 PMCID: PMC6884432 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-019-09815-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Fig. 1Generation of a mouse line carrying a single-copy human 5-HTT transgene. a–c The targeting vector was obtained by inserting a P2A-hLuc-T2A-SYFP2-FRT-Neo-FRT cassette at the stop codon of the human 5-HTT gene within a 62 kb human genomic fragment (BAC). Cre/LoxP recombination-mediated cassette exchange (RMCE) was then used to insert a single copy of the targeting vector into an acceptor site engineered at the Rosa26 in mouse ES cells. Proper ES cell targeting was verified by Southern Blot (b) transgene integrity was confirmed using a set of overlapping PCR probes spanning the region (c). d Expression of the human 5-HTT in the mouse brain as detected by the distribution of SYFP immunofluorescence in coronal brain sections from 5-HTT-LPR-16A mice (n = 2). Positive cell bodies are observed in the dorsal raphe nucleus (dashed line) and at lower levels outside the raphe in transgenic mice (intensity in the raphe is 40% higher). Background staining is seen in littermate wild-type (WT) controls. Scale bar: 200 µm. e Luciferase assays on adult whole brain protein extracts confirmed transgene expression in 16A (n = 2), but not WT controls (n = 3; data shown as mean ± SD). f Ectopic expression of the human 5-HTT in the mouse brain as detected by the distribution of SYFP immunofluorescence in coronal brain sections from 5-HTT-LPR-16A observed in the cortex (scale bar: 50 µm)
Fig. 2Generation of 5-HTT-LPR-16A-Rox and 14A-Rox mouse lines. a Generation of mice bearing the rox 16-A/14-A human 5-HTT-LPR Short (14A) allele. Cassettes carrying either the 14A or 16A polymorphisms with a rox-flanked Zeo-selection cassette inserted 116 bp upstream were used to replace the AMP-SacB cassette inserted into a 5-HTT-LPR containing BAC. Following selection of the correctly inserted polymorphic cassettes the Zeo-selection gene was removed by Dre-mediated recombination. This procedure left a 32 bp rox site upstream of 5-HTT-LPR. The 16A-Rox and 14A-Rox constructs were separately targeted to a mouse Rosa26 acceptor locus using Cre-dependent RMCE to produce single-copy insertions of the human 5-HTT locus at the same mouse genome location. b, c Targeting of the Rosa26 acceptor locus via RMCE and Southern blot screening using a 3′ radiolabeled probe. Positive ES clones were picked for expansion and further screening with the same PCR-based approach used to test transgene integrity above. Representative samples of 4 primer pairs are shown
Fig. 3Transgene expression in 16A-Rox and 14A-Rox lines. a Firefly luciferase activity in whole brain samples from 16A-Rox (n = 15, 9 males, 6 females) and 14A-Rox (n = 14, 7 males, 7 females) at postnatal day 6. No significant effect of genotype was detected, but female mice showed significantly greater transgene expression than males. b Luciferase activity in tissue punches from the dorsal raphe of adult (postnatal day 60) 16A-Rox;Tph2::rLuc-SCFP and 14A-Rox;Tph2::rLuc-SCFP mice revealed no significant genotype or sex effects (16A-Rox: n = 6, 3 males, 3 females; 14A-Rox: n = 6, 3 males, 3 females). c Relative luciferase activity was used to control for potential inconsistencies in the recovery of serotonin cell bodies in the raphe tissue punches (16A-Rox: n = 12, 7 males, 5 females; and 14A-Rox: n = 19, 8 males, 11 females; data shown as mean ± SEM)