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Behavioral Phenotyping in a Murine Model of GBA1-Associated Parkinson Disease.


ABSTRACT: Mutations in GBA1, the gene encoding glucocerebrosidase, are common genetic risk factors for Parkinson disease (PD). While the mechanism underlying this relationship is unclear, patients with GBA1-associated PD often have an earlier onset and faster progression than idiopathic PD. Previously, we modeled GBA1-associated PD by crossing gba haploinsufficient mice with mice overexpressing a human mutant α-synuclein transgene (SNCAA53T), observing an earlier demise, shorter life span and faster symptom progression, although behavioral testing was not performed. To assess whether gba+/-//SNCAA53T mice exhibit a prodromal behavioral phenotype, we studied three cardinal PD features: olfactory discrimination, memory dysfunction, and motor function. The longitudinal performance of gba+/-//SNCAA53T (n = 8), SNCAA53T (n = 9), gba+/- (n = 10) and wildtype (n = 6) mice was evaluated between ages 8 and 23 months using the buried pellet test, novel object recognition test and the beam walk. Fifteen-month-old gba+/-//SNCAA53T mice showed more olfactory and motor deficits than wildtype mice. However, differences between gba+/-//SNCAA53T and SNCAA53T mice generally did not reach statistical significance, possibly due to small sample sizes. Furthermore, while gba haploinsufficiency leads to a more rapid demise, this might not result in an earlier prodromal stage, and other factors, including aging, oxidative stress and epigenetics, may contribute to the more fulminant disease course.

SUBMITTER: Do J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8267726 | biostudies-literature |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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