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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Giasson BI, Duda JE, Quinn SM, Zhang B, Trojanowski JQ, Lee VM. Neuronal alpha-synucleinopathy with severe movement disorder in mice expressing A53T human alpha-synuclein. Neuron. 2002 May 16;34(4):521-33. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Presenting: A Not-Quite-Parkinson's Mouse Model

Comment by:  Michael Schlossmacher, ARF Advisor
Submitted 20 May 2002  |  Permalink Posted 20 May 2002

As is often the case with transgenic rodent models of human neurodegenerative diseases, a single strain of genetically engineered animals rarely recapitulates the entire pathological spectrum associated with the human phenotype. The same is true for the intriguing A53T mouse model of familial Parkinson disease reported by Giasson et al.

The authors present a model of mutant human a-synuclein-induced neuropathology that compares well with the CNS-wide effects of the inherited human disorder through its key abnormality, namely axonal pathology caused by accumulation of mutant α-synuclein.

Such abnormalities were recently reported in detail by the same team on a single case from a patient with a heterozygous A53T mutation of α-synuclein (Duda et al., Acta Neuropathologica, 2002). Surprisingly, and in contrast to other rodent and fly models overexpressing human α-synuclein, mice transgenic for the wild-type version of α-synuclein appear clinically and neuropathologically unharmed. Giasson et al. demonstrate intriguing immunological, relevant biochemical, as well as...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenting: A Not-Quite-Parkinson's Mouse Model

Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 21 May 2002  |  Permalink Posted 21 May 2002

"The identification of extended families showing mutations in α-synuclein and concomitant neurodegeneration resembling Parkinson's disease focused attention on the putative role of α-synuclein in Parkinson's. The discovery that α-synuclein was abundant in Lewy bodies further enhanced interest in this protein. Subsequent studies showed that the disease-related mutations in α-synuclein all increase its tendency to aggregate, suggesting that α-synuclein might be directly connected with Lewy body formation. This has raised hopes that expressing the mutant forms of human α-synuclein in mice might yield models for Parkinson's or other synucleinopathies.

The has not been straightforward, though. Many of the initial transgenic mice over-expressing α-synuclein did not produce pathology. The first success came with Eliezer Masliah's mouse that mildly overexpresses wild-type human α-synuclein (see ARF news story). It showed dopaminergic deficits and some inclusions but did not show extensive cell death, and the inclusions...  Read more


  Comment by:  Eddie Koo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 29 June 2002  |  Permalink Posted 29 June 2002
  I recommend this paper

Very nice study even though the result is somewhat predictable. However, given the previous study showing aggregates after over-expression of just wild type synuclein, this study is an important contribution.

View all comments by Eddie Koo

  Comment by:  George Perry (Disclosure)
Submitted 2 July 2002  |  Permalink Posted 2 July 2002
  I recommend this paper
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Stable Tg mouse lines carrying the wild-type (lines M7, M12, and M20) or mutant A53T (lines M83 and M91) human a-syn constructs were established.

Rabbit antibody SNL-1 and SNL-4 were raised to synthetic peptides corresponding to amino acids 2–12 and 104–119 in a-syn, respectively. Mouse monoclonals Syn 211, Syn 204, Syn 208, and LB 509 are specific for human a-syn, while mouse monoclonal antibodies Syn 102 and Syn 202 bind to both a- and b-syn. Syn 207 is a b-syn-specific mouse monoclonal antibody, and g-1 is a g-syn-specific rabbit antibody. Syn 303, Syn 505, Syn 506, and Syn 514 are mouse monoclonal antibodies raised to oxidized human a-synuclein. Although these antibodies do not recognize a specific oxidation modification, they preferentially recognize pathological a-syn inclusions. nSyn 823 is a nitration-specific antibody raised to nitrated a-syn. Murine monoclonal antibodies RMO32 and RMO55 are specific for phosphorylated NF midsize subunit (NFM), and RMO24 is specific for phosphorylated NF heavy subunit (NFH). Antibody 17026 is tau-specific rabbit polyclonal antibody and PHF-1 is mouse monoclonal antibody-specific for a phosphorylation epitope in tau. Anti-NSE (Polysciences, Inc.), anti-GFAP (DAKO), and anti-TH (Pelfreeze) are rabbit polyclonal antibodies. anti-ubiquitin (MAB1510) was purchased from Chemicon International, Inc

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