| Literature DB >> 35955710 |
Damiana Scuteri1,2, Kengo Hamamura3, Chizuko Watanabe4, Paolo Tonin2, Giacinto Bagetta1, Maria Tiziana Corasaniti5.
Abstract
Murine models are fundamental in the study of clinical conditions and the development of new drugs and treatments. Transgenic technology has started to offer advantages in oncology, encompassing all research fields related to the study of painful syndromes. Knockout mice or mice overexpressing genes encoding for proteins linked to pain development and maintenance can be produced and pain models can be applied to transgenic mice to model the most disabling neurological conditions. Due to the association of movement disorders with sensitivity and pain processing, our group focused for the first time on the role of the torsinA gene GAG deletion-responsible for DYT1 dystonia-in baseline sensitivity and neuropathic responses. The aim of the present report are to review the complex network that exists between the chaperonine-like protein torsinA and the baseline sensitivity pattern-which are fundamental in neuropathic pain-and to point at its possible role in neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: DYT1; dystonia; gabapentin; neurodegenerative diseases; pain; torsinA; transgenic mice
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35955710 PMCID: PMC9368787 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23158580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Effect of the overexpression of human wild-type (hWT) and mutated (hMT) torsinA on locomotor activity with respect to non-transgenic littermates (control). The transgene-positive hMT mice fell off the rotarod sooner than the hWT mice (p < 0.05). Reproduced with permission from [57].
Summary of genes and proteins involved in the genetic forms of primary dystonia and dystonia syndromes. Adapted and reproduced with permission from [80].
| Locus | Designation | Clinical Features | Gene/Inheritance | Protein | Putative Functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pure Dystonia | |||||
| DYT1 Chr9q34.11 | Early-onset primary | Childhood onset dystonia in limb with | tor1A autosomal | torsinA | AAA+ protein, nuclear |
| DYT2 | Early-onset dystonia | Adolescent-onset segmental | Autosomal recessive | Unknown | |
| DYT4 Chr19p13.3 | Whispering dysphonia | Childhood-onset laryngeal abductor | tubb4a autosomal | beta-tubulin 4a | Structural cytoskeleton |
| DYT6 Chr8p11.21 | Autosomal dominant early-onset focal | Early-onset dystonia | thap1 autosomal | Thanatos-associated | Atypical zinc-finger |
| DYT7 Chr8p | Familial focal dystonia | Adult-onset focal | Unknown autosomal | Unknown | |
| DYT13 Chr1p36.32– | Familial craniocervical | Focal or segmental | Unknown autosomal | Unknown | |
| DYT17 Chr20p11.2– | Early-onset autosomal recessive | Early-onset focal dystonia | Unknown autosomal recessive | Unknown | |
| DYT21 Chr2q14.3– | Late-onset dystonia | Late-onset multifocal | Unknown autosomal | Unknown | |
| DYT23 Chr9q34.11 | Cervical dystonia | Late-onset primary | ciz1 autosomal | cip1-interacting zinc | Regulation of G1–S |
| DYT24 Chr11p14.2 | Late-onset dystonia | Cranial and cervical | ano3 autosomal | Anoctamin 3 | Calcium-gated chloride |
| DYT25 Chr18p | Cervical dystonia with | Predominantly late-onset | gnal autosomal | Alpha subunit of G | Probable interaction |
|
| |||||
| DYT3 Xq13.1 | X-linked dystonia | Segmental or generalized | taf1 X-linked | TATA box-binding protein | Regulation of transcription |
| DYT5/14 Chr2q13.2 | DOPA (precursor of dopamine)-responsive | Dystonia with parkinsonism, | gch1 autosomal | GTP cyclohydrolase 1 | Rate-limiting enzyme |
| DYT11 Chr7q21.3 | Myoclonic dystonia | Upper body myoclonic | sgce autosomal | Epsilon-sarcoglycan | Cell membrane protein |
| DYT12 Chr19q13.2 | Rapid-onset dystonia | Acute-onset generalized | atp1a3aAutosomal | Alpha 3 subunit of | Subunit of Na/K |
Figure 2Time course of spinal nerve ligation (SNL)-induced mechanical allodynia in mice overexpressing human wild-type (hWT) and mutated (hMT) torsinA. Non-transgenic (NT), hWT and hMT mice did not show statistically significant differences in the development and maintenance of mechanical allodynia. However, hWT and hMT mice presented a delayed recovery from sensitization with longer lasting mechanical allodynia (two-way ANOVA F (32,374) = 1.561; p < 0.05 *; day 52 hWT vs. NT p < 0.01 **, hMT vs. NT p < 0.01 αα; day 59 hWT vs. NT p < 0.05 *, hMT vs. NT p < 0.01 αα; day 73 hWT vs. NT p < 0.05 *; day 86 hMT vs. NT p < 0.05 α). Data are expressed as mean ± SEM of the nociceptive reaction. p values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. n: NT = 4; hWT = 10; hMT = 11. Reproduced with permission from [5].