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Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()

Startle disease is an inherited neurological disorder that causes affected individuals to suffer noise- or touch-induced non-epileptic seizures, excessive muscle stiffness and neonatal apnea episodes. Mutations known to cause startle disease have been identified in glycine receptor subunit (GLRA1 an...

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Autores principales: Ganser, Lisa R., Yan, Qing, James, Victoria M., Kozol, Robert, Topf, Maya, Harvey, Robert J., Dallman, Julia E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3972633/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24029548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2013.09.002
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author Ganser, Lisa R.
Yan, Qing
James, Victoria M.
Kozol, Robert
Topf, Maya
Harvey, Robert J.
Dallman, Julia E.
author_facet Ganser, Lisa R.
Yan, Qing
James, Victoria M.
Kozol, Robert
Topf, Maya
Harvey, Robert J.
Dallman, Julia E.
author_sort Ganser, Lisa R.
collection PubMed
description Startle disease is an inherited neurological disorder that causes affected individuals to suffer noise- or touch-induced non-epileptic seizures, excessive muscle stiffness and neonatal apnea episodes. Mutations known to cause startle disease have been identified in glycine receptor subunit (GLRA1 and GLRB) and glycine transporter (SLC6A5) genes, which serve essential functions at glycinergic synapses. Despite the significant successes in identifying startle disease mutations, many idiopathic cases remain unresolved. Exome sequencing in these individuals will identify new candidate genes. To validate these candidate disease genes, zebrafish is an ideal choice due to rapid knockdown strategies, accessible embryonic stages, and stereotyped behaviors. The only existing zebrafish model of startle disease, bandoneon (beo), harbors point mutations in glrbb (one of two zebrafish orthologs of human GLRB) that cause compromised glycinergic transmission and touch-induced bilateral muscle contractions. In order to further develop zebrafish as a model for startle disease, we sought to identify common phenotypic outcomes of knocking down zebrafish orthologs of two known startle disease genes, GLRA1 and GLRB, using splice site-targeted morpholinos. Although both morphants were expected to result in phenotypes similar to the zebrafish beo mutant, our direct comparison demonstrated that while both glra1 and glrbb morphants exhibited embryonic spasticity, only glrbb morphants exhibited bilateral contractions characteristic of beo mutants. Likewise, zebrafish over-expressing a dominant startle disease mutation (GlyR α1(R271Q)) exhibited spasticity but not bilateral contractions. Since GlyR βb can interact with GlyR α subunits 2–4 in addition to GlyR α1, loss of the GlyR βb subunit may produce more severe phenotypes by affecting multiple GlyR subtypes. Indeed, immunohistochemistry of glra1 morphants suggests that in zebrafish, alternate GlyR α subunits can compensate for the loss of the GlyR α1 subunit. To address the potential for interplay among GlyR subunits during development, we quantified the expression time-course for genes known to be critical to glycinergic synapse function. We found that GlyR α2, α3 and α4a are expressed in the correct temporal pattern and could compensate for the loss of the GlyR α1 subunit. Based on our findings, future studies that aim to model candidate startle disease genes in zebrafish should include measures of spasticity and synaptic development.
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spelling pubmed-39726332014-04-03 Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease() Ganser, Lisa R. Yan, Qing James, Victoria M. Kozol, Robert Topf, Maya Harvey, Robert J. Dallman, Julia E. Neurobiol Dis Article Startle disease is an inherited neurological disorder that causes affected individuals to suffer noise- or touch-induced non-epileptic seizures, excessive muscle stiffness and neonatal apnea episodes. Mutations known to cause startle disease have been identified in glycine receptor subunit (GLRA1 and GLRB) and glycine transporter (SLC6A5) genes, which serve essential functions at glycinergic synapses. Despite the significant successes in identifying startle disease mutations, many idiopathic cases remain unresolved. Exome sequencing in these individuals will identify new candidate genes. To validate these candidate disease genes, zebrafish is an ideal choice due to rapid knockdown strategies, accessible embryonic stages, and stereotyped behaviors. The only existing zebrafish model of startle disease, bandoneon (beo), harbors point mutations in glrbb (one of two zebrafish orthologs of human GLRB) that cause compromised glycinergic transmission and touch-induced bilateral muscle contractions. In order to further develop zebrafish as a model for startle disease, we sought to identify common phenotypic outcomes of knocking down zebrafish orthologs of two known startle disease genes, GLRA1 and GLRB, using splice site-targeted morpholinos. Although both morphants were expected to result in phenotypes similar to the zebrafish beo mutant, our direct comparison demonstrated that while both glra1 and glrbb morphants exhibited embryonic spasticity, only glrbb morphants exhibited bilateral contractions characteristic of beo mutants. Likewise, zebrafish over-expressing a dominant startle disease mutation (GlyR α1(R271Q)) exhibited spasticity but not bilateral contractions. Since GlyR βb can interact with GlyR α subunits 2–4 in addition to GlyR α1, loss of the GlyR βb subunit may produce more severe phenotypes by affecting multiple GlyR subtypes. Indeed, immunohistochemistry of glra1 morphants suggests that in zebrafish, alternate GlyR α subunits can compensate for the loss of the GlyR α1 subunit. To address the potential for interplay among GlyR subunits during development, we quantified the expression time-course for genes known to be critical to glycinergic synapse function. We found that GlyR α2, α3 and α4a are expressed in the correct temporal pattern and could compensate for the loss of the GlyR α1 subunit. Based on our findings, future studies that aim to model candidate startle disease genes in zebrafish should include measures of spasticity and synaptic development. Academic Press 2013-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3972633/ /pubmed/24029548 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2013.09.002 Text en © 2013 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Article
Ganser, Lisa R.
Yan, Qing
James, Victoria M.
Kozol, Robert
Topf, Maya
Harvey, Robert J.
Dallman, Julia E.
Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title_full Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title_fullStr Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title_full_unstemmed Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title_short Distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
title_sort distinct phenotypes in zebrafish models of human startle disease()
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3972633/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24029548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2013.09.002
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