Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/6500
Title
Meis1: effects on motor phenotypes and the sensorimotor system in mice
Author(s)
Salminen, Aaro V. | Garrett, Lillian | Schormair, Barbara | Rozman, Jan | Giesert, Florian | Niedermeier, Kristina M. | Becker, Lore | Rathkolb, Birgit | Racz, Ildiko | Klingenspor, Martin | Klopstock, Thomas | Wolf, Eckhard | Zimmer, Andreas | Gailus-Durner, Valerie | Torres, Miguel CNIC | Fuchs, Helmut. | Hrabe de Angelis, Martin | Wurst, Wolfgang | Hoelter, Sabine M | Winkelmann, Juliane
Date issued
2017
Citation
Dis Model Mech. 2017; 10(8):981-991
Language
Inglés
Abstract
MEIS1 encodes a developmental transcription factor and has been linked
to restless legs syndrome (RLS) in genome-wide association studies. RLS
is a movement disorder leading to severe sleep reduction and has a
substantial impact on the quality of life of patients. In genome-wide
association studies, MEIS1 has consistently been the gene with the
highest effect size and functional studies suggest a disease-relevant
downregulation. Therefore, haploinsufficiency of Meis1 could be the
system with the most potential for modeling RLS in animals. We used
heterozygous Meis1-knockout mice to study the effects of Meis1
haploinsufficiency on mouse behavioral and neurological phenotypes, and
to relate the findings to human RLS. We exposed the Meis1-deficient mice
to assays of motor, sensorimotor and cognitive ability, and assessed the
effect of a dopaminergic receptor 2/3 agonist commonly used in the
treatment of RLS. The mutant mice showed a pattern of circadian
hyperactivity, which is compatible with human RLS. Moreover, we
discovered a replicable prepulse inhibition (PPI) deficit in the
Meis1-deficient animals. In addition, these mice were hyposensitive to
the PPI-reducing effect of the dopaminergic receptor agonist,
highlighting a role of Meis1 in the dopaminergic system. Other reported
phenotypes include enhanced social recognition at an older age that was
not related to alterations in adult olfactory bulb neurogenesis
previously shown to be implicated in this behavior. In conclusion, the
Meis1-deficient mice fulfill some of the hallmarks of an RLS animal
model, and revealed the role of Meis1 in sensorimotor gating and in the
dopaminergic systems modulating it.
Subject
Meis1 | Prepulse inhibition | Restless legs syndrome | Sensorimotor system | Mouse model | Pramipexole | RESTLESS LEGS SYNDROME | GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION | PREPULSE INHIBITION | EXPRESSION LEVELS | RISK | GENES | SLEEP | PATHOPHYSIOLOGY | HOMEOPROTEINS | NEUROGENESIS
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