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Título

Pathophysiology of Cerebellar Degeneration in Mitochondrial Disorders: Insights from the Harlequin Mouse

AutorFernández de la Torre, Miguel; Fiuza-Luces, Carmen; Laine-Menéndez, Sara CSIC; Delmiro, Aitor; Arenas, Joaquín; Martín, Miguel Ángel; Lucia, Alejandro; Morán, María
Palabras claveMitochondrial diseases
OXPHOS disorders
Complex I
Harlequin mouse
Ataxia
Long-term depression
Glutamate
GABA
Fecha de publicación1-jul-2023
EditorMultidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
CitaciónInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences 24(13): 10973 (2023)
ResumenBy means of a proteomic approach, we assessed the pathways involved in cerebellar neurodegeneration in a mouse model (Harlequin, Hq) of mitochondrial disorder. A differential proteomic profile study (iTRAQ) was performed in cerebellum homogenates of male Hq and wild-type (WT) mice 8 weeks after the onset of clear symptoms of ataxia in the Hq mice (aged 5.2 ± 0.2 and 5.3 ± 0.1 months for WT and Hq, respectively), followed by a biochemical validation of the most relevant changes. Additional groups of 2-, 3- and 6-month-old WT and Hq mice were analyzed to assess the disease progression on the proteins altered in the proteomic study. The proteomic analysis showed that beyond the expected deregulation of oxidative phosphorylation, the cerebellum of Hq mice showed a marked astroglial activation together with alterations in Ca2+ homeostasis and neurotransmission, with an up- and downregulation of GABAergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission, respectively, and the downregulation of cerebellar “long-term depression”, a synaptic plasticity phenomenon that is a major player in the error-driven learning that occurs in the cerebellar cortex. Our study provides novel insights into the mechanisms associated with cerebellar degeneration in the Hq mouse model, including a complex deregulation of neuroinflammation, oxidative phosphorylation and glutamate, GABA and amino acids’ metabolism.
Versión del editorhttps://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241310973
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/330412
DOI10.3390/ijms241310973
ISSN1661-6596
E-ISSN1422-0067
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