A novel, ataxic mouse model of Ataxia Telangiectasia caused by a clinically relevant nonsense mutation

Author:

Perez Harvey,Abdallah May F.,Chavira Jose I.,Norris Angelina S.,Egeland Martin T.,Vo Karen L.,Buechsenschuetz Callan L.,Sanghez Valentina,Kim Jeannie L.,Pind Molly,Nakamura Kotoka,Hicks Geoffrey G.,Gatti Richard A.,Madrenas JoaquinORCID,Iacovino Michelina,McKinnon Peter J.,Mathews Paul J.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractAtaxia Telangiectasia (A-T) and Ataxia with Ocular Apraxia Type 1 (AOA1) are devastating neurological disorders caused by null mutations in the genome stability genes, A-T mutated (ATM) and Aprataxin (APTX), respectively. Our mechanistic understanding and therapeutic repertoire for treating these disorders is severely lacking, in large part due to the failure of prior animal models with similar null mutations to recapitulate the characteristic loss of motor coordination (i.e., ataxia) and associated cerebellar defects. By increasing genotoxic stress through the insertion of null mutations in both the Atm (nonsense) and Aptx (knockout) genes in the same animal, we have generated a novel mouse model that for the first time develops a progressively severe ataxic phenotype associated with atrophy of the cerebellar molecular layer. We find biophysical properties of cerebellar Purkinje neurons are significantly perturbed (e.g., reduced membrane capacitance, lower action potential thresholds, etc.), while properties of synaptic inputs remain largely unchanged. These perturbations significantly alter Purkinje neuron neural activity, including a progressive reduction in spontaneous action potential firing frequency that correlates with both cerebellar atrophy and ataxia over the animal’s first year of life. Double mutant mice also exhibit a high predisposition to developing cancer (thymomas) and immune abnormalities (impaired early thymocyte development and T-cell maturation), symptoms characteristic of A-T. Lastly, by inserting a clinically relevant nonsense-type null mutation in Atm, we demonstrate that Small Molecule Read-Through (SMRT) compounds can restore ATM production, indicating their potential as a future A-T therapeutic.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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