Transgenic Animal Models of Huntington’s Disease

Author(s):  
Shang-Hsun Yang ◽  
Anthony W. S. Chan
Author(s):  
Z. Voysey ◽  
S. V. Fazal ◽  
A. S. Lazar ◽  
R. A. Barker

Abstract Introduction Mounting evidence supports the existence of an important feedforward cycle between sleep and neurodegeneration, wherein neurodegenerative diseases cause sleep and circadian abnormalities, which in turn exacerbate and accelerate neurodegeneration. If so, sleep therapies bear important potential to slow progression in these diseases. Findings This cycle is challenging to study, as its bidirectional nature renders cause difficult to disentangle from effect. Likewise, well-controlled intervention studies are often impractical in the setting of established neurodegenerative disease. It is this that makes understanding sleep and circadian abnormalities in Huntington’s disease (HD) important: as a monogenic fully penetrant neurodegenerative condition presenting in midlife, it provides a rare opportunity to study sleep and circadian abnormalities longitudinally, prior to and throughout disease manifestation, and in the absence of confounds rendered by age and comorbidities. It also provides potential to trial sleep therapies at a preclinical or early disease stage. Moreover, its monogenic nature facilitates the development of transgenic animal models through which to run parallel pre-clinical studies. HD, therefore, provides a key model condition through which to gain new insights into the sleep-neurodegeneration interface. Conclusions Here, we begin by summarising contemporary knowledge of sleep abnormalities in HD, and consider how well these parallel those of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s as more common neurodegenerative conditions. We then discuss what is currently known of the sleep-neurodegeneration cyclical relationship in HD. We conclude by outlining key directions of current and future investigation by which to advance the sleep-neurodegeneration field via studies in HD.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucía Gabriela García-Lara ◽  
Adriana Morales-Martínez ◽  
Quetzalli Denisse Angeles-López ◽  
Hilda Pedraza-Espitia ◽  
Iván Pérez-Neri ◽  
...  

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disorder of the central nervous system that mainly affects the basal ganglia and has no cure. The mutation is located at an abnormal expansion of the CAG triplet in the Huntingtin gene. Humans show psychiatric, behavioural and motor disorders. Transgenic animal models are essential to the study of HD since the disease only affects humans. Therefore, the aim of this article was to describe the formation and maintenance of and to validate the progressive neurological phenotype of an R6/1 transgenic mouse colony. To achieve our objective, the colony founder was imported from Jackson Laboratories, and the mice were kept under controlled environmental conditions. The animals were bred at the vivarium of the Instituto Nacional de Neurología y Neurocirugía Man­uel Velasco Suárez. The R6/1 transgenic mice were successfully bred and showed genetic and phenotypic characteristics similar to the ones previously reported. Our colony is currently established and validated with the condi­tions of our vivarium and has produced more than four generations of R6/1 mice. The establishment of the R6/1 colony and its maintenance through generation is an advantage since it allows us to follow the authenticity of the transgenic mice regarding their phenotypic and motor behaviours. Fur­thermore, these animals can be compared with other transgenic mice that reproduce some of the main characteristics of the disease manifested in hu­mans, making these transgenic R6/1 mice a useful tool for the study of HD.


2005 ◽  
Vol 1739 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 251-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginia M.-Y. Lee ◽  
Theresa K. Kenyon ◽  
John Q. Trojanowski

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