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Publication : Impaired GABA and glycine transmission triggers cardinal features of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder in mice.

First Author  Brooks PL Year  2011
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  31
Issue  19 Pages  7111-21
PubMed ID  21562273 Mgi Jnum  J:173399
Mgi Id  MGI:5013994 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0347-11.2011
Citation  Brooks PL, et al. (2011) Impaired GABA and glycine transmission triggers cardinal features of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder in mice. J Neurosci 31(19):7111-21
abstractText  Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a neurological disease characterized by loss of normal REM motor inhibition and subsequent dream enactment. RBD is clinically relevant because it predicts neurodegenerative disease onset (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and is clinically problematic because it disrupts sleep and results in patient injuries and hospitalization. Even though the cause of RBD is unknown, multiple lines of evidence indicate that abnormal inhibitory transmission underlies the disorder. Here, we show that transgenic mice with deficient glycine and GABA transmission have a behavioral, motor, and sleep phenotype that recapitulates the cardinal features of RBD. Specifically, we show that mice with impaired glycine and GABA(A) receptor function exhibit REM motor behaviors, non-REM muscle twitches, sleep disruption, and EEG slowing--the defining disease features. Importantly, the RBD phenotype is rescued by drugs (e.g., clonazepam and melatonin) that are routinely used to treat human disease symptoms. Our findings are the first to identify a potential mechanism for RBD--we show that deficits in glycine- and GABA(A)-mediated inhibition trigger the full spectrum of RBD symptoms. We propose that these mice are a useful resource for investigating in vivo disease mechanisms and developing potential therapeutics for RBD.
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