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Publication : Chronic BMAA exposure combined with TDP-43 mutation elicits motor neuron dysfunction phenotypes in mice.

First Author  Arnold FJ Year  2023
Journal  Neurobiol Aging Volume  126
Pages  44-57 PubMed ID  36931113
Mgi Jnum  J:338287 Mgi Id  MGI:7460955
Doi  10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2023.02.010 Citation  Arnold FJ, et al. (2023) Chronic BMAA exposure combined with TDP-43 mutation elicits motor neuron dysfunction phenotypes in mice. Neurobiol Aging 126:44-57
abstractText  Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease with an average age-of-onset of approximately 60 years and is usually fatal within 2-5 years of diagnosis. Mouse models based upon single gene mutations do not recapitulate all ALS pathological features. Environmental insults may also contribute to ALS, and beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) is an environmental toxin linked with an increased risk of developing ALS. BMAA, along with cycasin, are hypothesized to be the cause of the Guam-ALS epicenter of the 1950s. We developed a multihit model based on low expression of a dominant familial ALS TDP-43 mutation (Q331K) and chronic low-dose BMAA exposure. Our two-hit mouse model displayed a motor phenotype absent from either lesion alone. By LC/MS analysis, free BMAA was confirmed at trace levels in brain, and were as high as 405 ng/mL (free) and 208 ng/mL (protein-bound) in liver. Elevated BMAA levels in liver were associated with dysregulation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) pathway. Our data represent initial steps towards an ALS mouse model resulting from combined genetic and environmental insult.
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