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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Li Y, Liu W, Oo TF, Wang L, Tang Y, Jackson-Lewis V, Zhou C, Geghman K, Bogdanov M, Przedborski S, Beal MF, Burke RE, Li C. Mutant LRRK2(R1441G) BAC transgenic mice recapitulate cardinal features of Parkinson's disease. Nat Neurosci. 2009 Jul;12(7):826-8. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Research Brief: A Better Mouse Model of Parkinson Disease?

Comment by:  Mark Cookson
Submitted 12 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 12 June 2009

A progressive, and eventually dramatic, depletion of dopamine-containing neurons that project from the substantia nigra pars compacta to the striatum is one hallmark of Parkinson disease. Nigral cell loss is thought to be the pathological event leading to many of the movement problems in PD and is the basis of mainstay therapy using L-DOPA for many patients. Several toxins, including 6-OHDA, MPTP and rotenone, have been used for several years to induce dramatic damage to the substantia nigra as a model of parkinsonism (1). Although there are some problems with these models, they have been very important in understanding mechanisms related to denervation in the basal ganglia. In contrast, genetic-based models have produced generally mild and sometimes inconsistent phenotypes (2). Furthermore, none that I know of produce a dramatic lesion of the nigra or a particularly strong behavioral output. Delivery of α-synuclein, a gene thought to be causal for PD, directly to the substantia nigra using viral vectors produces the most striking cell loss phenotype (3) but even this is...  Read more

  Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2009

LRRK2 R1441C Mice Recapitulate PD Motor Deficits
The recent article by C.J. Li’s group reports on the first transgenic LRRK2 mouse model. The LRRK2 mouse uses a BAC system to express WT or R1441C LRRK2, which is a mutation in the GTPase domain of LRRK2. The benefit of the BAC system is that it permits use of the LRRK2 promoter, which allows for an expression pattern that is elevated but exhibits a distribution that recapitulates the pattern of endogenous LRRK2. The mouse is notable in several respects. The most important observation is that the mouse exhibits age-dependent motor deficits that are responsive to L-DOPA, which is a classic phenotype observed in patients with Parkinson disease and shows that the motor deficits derive from dysfunction of dopaminergic neurons. The nature of the dysfunction, though, is not entirely clear. The group reports a modest decrease in dopamine release from the neurons. This phenotype is reminiscent of phenotypes observed for parkin and PINK1 mice, and might be a preliminary indication that deficits in dopamine release are a common...  Read more
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