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Publication : Insertion mutation at the C-terminus of the serotonin transporter disrupts brain serotonin function and emotion-related behaviors in mice.

First Author  Zhao S Year  2006
Journal  Neuroscience Volume  140
Issue  1 Pages  321-34
PubMed ID  16542782 Mgi Jnum  J:108880
Mgi Id  MGI:3625229 Doi  10.1016/j.neuroscience.2006.01.049
Citation  Zhao S, et al. (2006) Insertion mutation at the C-terminus of the serotonin transporter disrupts brain serotonin function and emotion-related behaviors in mice. Neuroscience 140(1):321-34
abstractText  The 5-hydroxytryptamine transporter (5-HTT) regulates 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) neurotransmission by removing 5-HT from the synaptic cleft. Emerging evidence from clinical and genetic studies implicates the 5-HTT in various neuropsychiatric conditions, including anxiety and depression. Here we report that a 5-HTT null mutant mouse line was generated by gene trapping that disrupted the sequence encoding the C-terminus of 5-HTT. This mutation resulted in significant reduction of 5-HTT mRNA and loss of 5-HTT protein. Brain levels of 5-HT and its major metabolite, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, were markedly decreased in C-terminus 5-HTT -/- mice, while 5-HT uptake or 5-HT content in platelets was absent. Behavioral phenotyping showed that C-terminus 5-HTT -/- mice were normal on a screen for gross behavioral, neurological, and sensory functions. In the tail suspension test for depression-related behavior, C-terminus 5-HTT -/- mice showed increased immobility relative to their +/+ controls. By comparison, a previously generated line of 5-HTT -/- mice lacking exon 2, encoding the N-terminus of the 5-HTT, showed abnormally high immobility in response to repeated, but not acute, exposure to the tail suspension test. In a novel, brightly-lit open field, both C-terminus 5-HTT -/- mice and N-terminus 5-HTT -/- mice displayed decreased center time and reduced locomotor activity compared with their +/+ controls. Both mutant lines buried significantly fewer marbles than their +/+ controls in the marble burying test. These findings further demonstrate the neurobiological functions of the 5-HTT and add to a growing literature linking genetic variation in 5-HTT function with emotional abnormalities.
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