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Point mutant mice with hypersensitive alpha 4 nicotinic receptors show dopaminergic deficits and increased anxiety

Authors :
Labarca, Cesar
Schwarz, Johannes
Deshpande, Purnima
Schwarz, Sigrid
Nowak, Mark W.
Fonck, Carlos
Nashmi, Raad
Kofuji, Paulo
Dang, Hong
Shi, Wenmei
Fidan, Melihat
Khakh, Baljit S.
Chen, Zhoufeng
Bowers, Barbara J.
Boulter, Jim
Wehner, Jeanne M.
Lester, Henry A.
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2001.

Abstract

Knock-in mice were generated that harbored a leucine-to-serine mutation in the alpha4 nicotinic receptor near the gate in the channel pore. Mice with intact expression of this hypersensitive receptor display dominant neonatal lethality. These mice have a severe deficit of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, possibly because the hypersensitive receptors are continuously activated by normal extracellular choline concentrations. A strain that retains the neo selection cassette in an intron has reduced expression of the hypersensitive receptor and is viable and fertile. The viable mice display increased anxiety, poor motor learning, excessive ambulation that is eliminated by very low levels of nicotine, and a reduction of nigrostriatal dopaminergic function upon aging. These knock-in mice provide useful insights into the pathophysiology of sustained nicotinic receptor activation and may provide a model for Parkinson's disease.

Subjects

Subjects :
Caltech Library Services

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od........38..298e811ed4564ec1f9744febe532ee47