1. Severe amygdala dysfunction in a MAPT transgenic mouse model of frontotemporal dementia
- Author
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Linda Rousseau, Leonard Petrucelli, Monica Castanedes-Casey, Nawsheen Shukoor, Dennis W. Dickson, John D. Fryer, Kristyn Scheffel, Casey Cook, Michael S. Penuliar, Judy Dunmore, Jimei Tong, Virginia Phillips, Melissa E. Murray, and Aishe Kurti
- Subjects
Genetically modified mouse ,Aging ,Elevated plus maze ,Mice, Transgenic ,tau Proteins ,Severity of Illness Index ,Amygdala ,Article ,Mice ,Memory ,Conditioning, Psychological ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Learning ,Fear conditioning ,Language ,Behavior, Animal ,General Neuroscience ,Parkinsonism ,Neurodegeneration ,Fear ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontotemporal Dementia ,Mutation ,Nerve Degeneration ,Exploratory Behavior ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tauopathy ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Developmental Biology ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
Frontotemporal dementia with Parkinsonism-linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17) is a neurodegenerative tauopathy caused by mutations in the tau gene (MAPT). Individuals with FTDP-17 have deficits in learning, memory and language, in addition to personality and behavioral changes that are often characterized by a lack of social inhibition. Several transgenic mouse models expressing tau mutations have been tested extensively for memory or motor impairments, though reports of amygdala-dependent behaviors are lacking. To this end, we tested the rTg4510 mouse model on a behavioral battery that included amygdala-dependent tasks of exploration. As expected, rTg4510 mice exhibit profound impairments in hippocampal-dependent learning and memory tests, including contextual fear conditioning. However, rTg4510 mice also display an abnormal hyper-exploratory phenotype in the open field assay, elevated plus maze, light-dark exploration, and cued fear conditioning, indicative of amygdala dysfunction. Furthermore, significant tau burden is detected in the amygdala of both rTg4510 mice and human FTDP-17 patients, suggesting that the rTg4510 mouse model recapitulates the behavioral disturbances and neurodegeneration of the amygdala characteristic of FTDP-17.
- Published
- 2014
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