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Publication : Pre-clinical symptoms of SBMA may not be androgen-dependent: implications from two SBMA mouse models.

First Author  Xu Y Year  2018
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  27
Issue  14 Pages  2425-2442
PubMed ID  29897452 Mgi Jnum  J:263785
Mgi Id  MGI:6188781 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddy142
Citation  Xu Y, et al. (2018) Pre-clinical symptoms of SBMA may not be androgen-dependent: implications from two SBMA mouse models. Hum Mol Genet 27(14):2425-2442
abstractText  A distinguishing aspect of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is its androgen-dependence, possibly explaining why only males are clinically affected. This disease, which impairs neuromuscular function, is linked to a polyglutamine expansion mutation in the androgen receptor (AR). In mouse models of SBMA, motor dysfunction is associated with pronounced defects in neuromuscular transmission, including defects in evoked transmitter release (quantal content, QC) and fiber membrane excitability (based on the resting membrane potential, RMP). However, whether such defects are androgen-dependent is unknown. Thus, we recorded synaptic potentials intracellularly from adult muscle fibers of transgenic (Tg) AR97Q male mice castrated pre-symptomatically. Although castration largely protects both QC and the RMP of fibers, correlating with the protective effect of castration on motor function, significant deficits in QC and RMP remained. Surprisingly, comparable defects in QC and RMP were also observed in pre-symptomatic AR97Q males, indicating that such defects emerge early and are pre-clinical. Exposing asymptomatic Tg females to androgens also induces both motor dysfunction and comparable defects in QC and RMP. Notably, asymptomatic Tg females also showed significant deficits in QC and RMP, albeit less severe, supporting their pre-clinical nature, but also raising questions about the androgen-dependence of pre-clinical symptoms. In summary, current evidence indicates that disease progression depends on androgens, but early pathogenic events may be triggered by the mutant AR allele independent of androgens. Such early, androgen-independent disease mechanisms may also be relevant to females carrying the SBMA allele.
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