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Heterogeneous expression of hydrocephalic phenotype in the hyh mice carrying a point mutation in alpha-snap

Authors :
Esteban M. Rodríguez
Sara Rodríguez
José Manuel Pérez-Fígares
Antonio J. Jiménez
Carolina Wagner
Patricia Páez
Luis Federico Bátiz
Source :
NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, Artículos CONICYT, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT, Neurobiology of Disease, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 152-168 (2006)
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
BLACKWELL SCIENCE, 2006.

Abstract

The hyh mouse carrying a point mutation in the gene encoding for soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (NSF) attachment protein alpha (alpha-SNAP) develops inherited hydrocephalus. The investigation was designed to study: (i) the clinical evolution of hyh mice; (ii) factors other than the alpha-SNAP mutation that may influence the expression of hydrocephalus; (iii) the neuropathological features underlying the different forms of clinical evolution. The study included 3017 mice, 22.4% of which were hydrocephalic. The neuropathological study was performed in 112 mice by use of light and electron microscopy. It was found that maternal- and sex-related factors are involved in the heterogeneous expression of hyh phenotype. The clinical evolution recorded throughout a 4-year period also revealed a heterogeneous expression of the hydrocephalic phenotype. Two subpopulations were distinguished: (i) 70% of mice underwent a rapidly progressive hydrocephalus and died during the first 2 months of life; they presented macrocephaly, extremely large expansion of the ventricles, equilibrium impairment and decreased motor activity. (ii) Mice with slowly progressive hydrocephalus (30%) survived for periods ranging between 2 months and 2 years. They had no or moderate macrocephaly; moderate ventricular dilatation and preserved general motor activity; they all presented spontaneous ventriculostomies communicating the ventricles with the subarachnoid space, indicating that such communications play a key role in the long survival of these mice. The hyh mutant represents an ideal animal model to investigate how do the brain "adapt" to a virtually life-lasting hydrocephalus.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, Artículos CONICYT, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT, Neurobiology of Disease, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 152-168 (2006)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32a4c1f7d133a1e8dc7f3e7f1c5e7a40