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Publication : Cognitive deficits in a mouse model of pre-manifest Parkinson's disease.

First Author  Magen I Year  2012
Journal  Eur J Neurosci Volume  35
Issue  6 Pages  870-82
PubMed ID  22356593 Mgi Jnum  J:187056
Mgi Id  MGI:5435164 Doi  10.1111/j.1460-9568.2012.08012.x
Citation  Magen I, et al. (2012) Cognitive deficits in a mouse model of pre-manifest Parkinson's disease. Eur J Neurosci 35(6):870-82
abstractText  Early cognitive deficits are increasingly recognized in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), and represent an unmet need for the treatment of PD. These early deficits have been difficult to model in mice, and their mechanisms are poorly understood. alpha-Synuclein is linked to both familial and sporadic forms of PD, and is believed to accumulate in brains of patients with PD before cell loss. Mice expressing human wild-type alpha-synuclein under the Thy1 promoter (Thy1-aSyn mice) exhibit broad overexpression of alpha-synuclein throughout the brain and dynamic alterations in dopamine release several months before striatal dopamine loss. We now show that these mice exhibit deficits in cholinergic systems involved in cognition, and cognitive deficits in domains affected in early PD. Together with an increase in extracellular dopamine and a decrease in cortical acetylcholine at 4-6 months of age, Thy1-aSyn mice made fewer spontaneous alternations in the Y-maze and showed deficits in tests of novel object recognition (NOR), object-place recognition, and operant reversal learning, as compared with age-matched wild-type littermates. These data indicate that cognitive impairments that resemble early PD manifestations are reproduced by alpha-synuclein overexpression in a murine genetic model of PD. With high power to detect drug effects, these anomalies provide a novel platform for testing improved treatments for these pervasive cognitive deficits.
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