Parkinson's Disease α-Synuclein Transgenic Mice Develop Neuronal Mitochondrial Degeneration and Cell Death
Johns Hopkins University · Johns Hopkins Medicine · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Alpha-synuclein (alpha-Syn) is enriched in nerve terminals. Two mutations in the alpha-Syn gene (Ala53--> Thr and Ala30--> Pro) occur in autosomal dominant familial Parkinson's disease. Mice overexpressing the human A53T mutant alpha-Syn develop a severe movement disorder, paralysis, and synucleinopathy, but the mechanisms are not understood. We examined whether transgenic mice expressing human wild-type or familial Parkinson's disease-linked A53T or A30P mutant alpha-syn develop neuronal degeneration and cell death. Mutant mice were examined at early- to mid-stage disease and at near end-stage disease. Age-matched nontransgenic littermates were controls. In A53T mice, neurons in brainstem and spinal cord…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 59
Authors
8- LJLee J. MartinCorresponding
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
- YPYan Pan
Johns Hopkins University, Center for Neurosciences
- ACAnn C. Price
Johns Hopkins University, Center for Neurosciences
- WSWanda Sterling
Johns Hopkins University, Center for Neurosciences
- NGNeal G. Copeland
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Cancer Genetics (United States)
Topics & keywords
- Neurodegeneration
- Biology
- Brainstem
- Spinal cord
- Motor neuron
- Alpha-synuclein
- Genetically modified mouse
- Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase
- Good health and well-being