Neurodegenerative phenotypes in an A53T ?-synuclein transgenic mouse model are independent of LRRK2.
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ABSTRACT: Mutations in the genes encoding LRRK2 and ?-synuclein cause autosomal dominant forms of familial Parkinson's disease (PD). Fibrillar forms of ?-synuclein are a major component of Lewy bodies, the intracytoplasmic proteinaceous inclusions that are a pathological hallmark of idiopathic and certain familial forms of PD. LRRK2 mutations cause late-onset familial PD with a clinical, neurochemical and, for the most part, neuropathological phenotype that is indistinguishable from idiopathic PD. Importantly, ?-synuclein-positive Lewy bodies are the most common pathology identified in the brains of PD subjects harboring LRRK2 mutations. These observations may suggest that LRRK2 functions in a common pathway with ?-synuclein to regulate its aggregation. To explore the potential pathophysiological interaction between LRRK2 and ?-synuclein in vivo, we modulated LRRK2 expression in a well-established human A53T ?-synuclein transgenic mouse model with transgene expression driven by the hindbrain-selective prion protein promoter. Deletion of LRRK2 or overexpression of human G2019S-LRRK2 has minimal impact on the lethal neurodegenerative phenotype that develops in A53T ?-synuclein transgenic mice, including premature lethality, pre-symptomatic behavioral deficits and human ?-synuclein or glial neuropathology. We also find that endogenous or human LRRK2 and A53T ?-synuclein do not interact together to influence the number of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons. Taken together, our data suggest that ?-synuclein-related pathology, which occurs predominantly in the hindbrain of this A53T ?-synuclein mouse model, occurs largely independently from LRRK2 expression. These observations fail to provide support for a pathophysiological interaction of LRRK2 and ?-synuclein in vivo, at least within neurons of the mouse hindbrain.
SUBMITTER: Daher JP
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3349422 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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