A new mouse model provides insight into genetic neurological disorders
Neurosensory diseases are difficult to model in mice because their symptoms are complex and diverse. The genetic causes identified are often lethal when transferred to a mouse. The lack of animal models slows progress in understanding and treating the diseases. By strategically altering a protein-making molecule, a mouse was made to help understand nervous system diseases that impair feeling and cause paralysis of the arms and legs in humans. Scientists have created a mouse to help understand human neuronal diseases that impair a patient's ability to feel and to move their arms and legs. By strategically altering a protein-making molecule, a mouse was made with symptoms similar to the nervous system diseases, Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) and hereditary motor neuropathy (HMN). In CMT and HMN, neurons that signal and maintain muscle cells become defective, which causes weakening and loss of muscle that is significant enough in some cases to lead to death. The symptoms become progressively worse over time and no effective treatments or cures exist for these diseases. Researchers came together from the University College London (UCL), the Medical Research Centre (MRC) Harwell, the University of Oxford, and the University of London in England, Vrije University in The Netherlands and Jackson Laboratories in the US to make a genetic change in mice that has been associated with CMT and HMN diseases in people.
Neurosensory diseases are difficult to model in mice because they involve symptoms that are complex and diverse. These diseases are passed from parents to their children but the genetic causes identified are often lethal when transferred to a mouse. The lack of animal models slows progress in understanding and treating the diseases.
The researchers made a mutation in a protein, which is part of the protein building machinery, called glycyl-tRNA synthetase (GARS). As described in their study in Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM),
When the researchers made the same mutation in two different breeds of mice it caused two distinguishable sets of symptoms, demonstrating that the genetic background influences the effects of the GARS gene mutation. This variability in the mouse disease symptoms is also seen in humans, and may help shed light on how CMT and HMN differently affect individual patients' symptoms.
Source: The Company of Biologists
Related
- Mouse model of prion disease mimics diverse symptoms of human disorderWed, 26 Nov 2008, 12:58:01 EST
- New reagents for genomic engineering of mouse models to understand human diseaseWed, 19 Aug 2009, 1:16:23 EDT
- New, improved mouse model of human Alzheimer's may enable drug discoveryThu, 8 Nov 2012, 18:07:59 EST
- New mouse models generated for MYH9 genetic disordersWed, 9 Mar 2011, 12:02:49 EST
- Mouse model provides a new tool for investigators of human developmental disorderTue, 21 Apr 2009, 7:21:54 EDT
Other sources
- New Mouse Model Provides Insight Into Genetic Neurological Disordersfrom Science DailyWed, 27 May 2009, 14:21:25 EDT
- A new mouse model provides insight into genetic neurological disordersfrom Science CentricTue, 26 May 2009, 10:28:43 EDT
- A new mouse model provides insight into genetic neurological disordersfrom Science BlogTue, 26 May 2009, 1:49:17 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- Which qubit my dear? New method to distinguish between neighbouring quantum bits
- New compound excels at killing persistent and drug-resistant tuberculosis
- How useful is fracking anyway? Study explores return of investment
- Chemical probe confirms that body makes its own rotten egg gas, H2S, to benefit health
- IQ link to baby's weight gain in first month
- Even with defects, graphene is strongest material in the world
- Detection of the cosmic gamma ray horizon: Measures all the light in the universe since the Big Bang
- Genetic engineering alters mosquitoes' sense of smell
- Allosaurus fed more like a falcon than a crocodile, new study finds
- 'Popcorn' particle pathways promise better lithium-ion batteries