Differential expression of striatal proteins in a mouse model of DOPA-responsive dystonia reveals shared mechanisms among dystonic disorders

多巴反应性肌张力障碍小鼠模型中纹状体蛋白的差异表达揭示了肌张力障碍之间的共同机制

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作者:Maria A Briscione, Ashok R Dinasarapu, Pritha Bagchi, Yuping Donsante, Kaitlyn M Roman, Anthony M Downs, Xueliang Fan, Jessica Hoehner, H A Jinnah, Ellen J Hess

Abstract

Dystonia is characterized by involuntary muscle contractions that cause debilitating twisting movements and postures. Although dysfunction of the basal ganglia, a brain region that mediates movement, is implicated in many forms of dystonia, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. The inherited metabolic disorder DOPA-responsive dystonia is considered a prototype for understanding basal ganglia dysfunction in dystonia because it is caused by mutations in genes necessary for the synthesis of the neurotransmitter dopamine, which mediates the activity of the basal ganglia. Therefore, to reveal abnormal striatal cellular processes and pathways implicated in dystonia, we used an unbiased proteomic approach in a knockin mouse model of DOPA-responsive dystonia, a model in which the striatum is known to play a central role in the expression of dystonia. Fifty-seven of the 1805 proteins identified were differentially regulated in DOPA-responsive dystonia mice compared to control mice. Most differentially regulated proteins were associated with gene ontology terms that implicated either mitochondrial or synaptic dysfunction whereby proteins associated with mitochondrial function were generally over-represented and proteins associated with synaptic function were largely under-represented. Remarkably, nearly 20% of the differentially regulated striatal proteins identified in our screen are associated with pathogenic variants that cause inherited disorders with dystonia as a sign in humans suggesting shared mechanisms across many different forms of dystonia.

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