15 research outputs found

    Rapid and Progressive Regional Brain Atrophy in CLN6 Batten Disease Affected Sheep Measured with Longitudinal Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

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    Variant late-infantile Batten disease is a neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis caused by mutations in CLN6. It is a recessive genetic lysosomal storage disease characterised by progressive neurodegeneration. It starts insidiously and leads to blindness, epilepsy and dementia in affected children. Sheep that are homozygous for a natural mutation in CLN6 have an ovine form of Batten disease Here, we used in vivo magnetic resonance imaging to track brain changes in 4 unaffected carriers and 6 affected Batten disease sheep. We scanned each sheep 4 times, between 17 and 22 months of age. Cortical atrophy in all sheep was pronounced at the baseline scan in all affected Batten disease sheep. Significant atrophy was also present in other brain regions (caudate, putamen and amygdala). Atrophy continued measurably in all of these regions during the study. Longitudinal MRI in sheep was sensitive enough to measure significant volume changes over the relatively short study period, even in the cortex, where nearly 40% of volume was already lost at the start of the study. Thus longitudinal MRI could be used to study the dynamics of progression of neurodegenerative changes in sheep models of Batten disease, as well as to assess therapeutic efficacy

    Complex Reorganization and Predominant Non-Homologous Repair Following Chromosomal Breakage in Karyotypically Balanced Germline Rearrangements and Transgenic Integration

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    We defined the genetic landscape of balanced chromosomal rearrangements at nucleotide resolution by sequencing 141 breakpoints from cytogenetically-interpreted translocations and inversions. We confirm that the recently described phenomenon of “chromothripsis” (massive chromosomal shattering and reorganization) is not unique to cancer cells but also occurs in the germline where it can resolve to a karyotypically balanced state with frequent inversions. We detected a high incidence of complex rearrangements (19.2%) and substantially less reliance on microhomology (31%) than previously observed in benign CNVs. We compared these results to experimentally-generated DNA breakage-repair by sequencing seven transgenic animals, and revealed extensive rearrangement of the transgene and host genome with similar complexity to human germline alterations. Inversion is the most common rearrangement, suggesting that a combined mechanism involving template switching and non-homologous repair mediates the formation of balanced complex rearrangements that are viable, stably replicated and transmitted unaltered to subsequent generations

    Increased plasma melatonin in presymptomatic Huntington disease sheep ( Ovis aries ): Compensatory neuroprotection in a neurodegenerative disease?

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    Melatonin is a pleiotrophic hormone, synthesised primarily by the pineal gland under the control of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). It not only provides a hormonal signal of darkness but also has neuroprotective properties. Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterised by abnormal motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms. There is growing evidence, particularly from animal models, that circadian rhythms may also be disturbed in HD. We measured two circadian‐regulated hormones, melatonin and cortisol, in plasma samples collected around‐the‐clock from normal and presymptomatic transgenic HD sheep (Ovis aries) at 5 and 7 years of age, to assess SCN‐driven rhythms and the effect of genotype, sex and age. Melatonin‐related precursors and metabolites (tryptophan, serotonin, kynurenine) were also measured by liquid chromatography (LC)‐mass spectrometry (MS). At 5 years of age in both rams and ewes, plasma melatonin levels were significantly elevated in HD sheep. In ewes measured 2 years later, there was still a significant elevation of nocturnal melatonin. Furthermore, the daytime baseline levels of melatonin were significantly higher in HD sheep. Since increased melatonin could have global beneficial effects on brain function, we suggest that the increased melatonin measured in presymptomatic HD sheep is part of an autoprotective response to mutant huntingtin toxicity that may account, at least in part, for the late onset of disease that characterises HD

    Increased plasma melatonin in presymptomatic Huntington disease sheep ( Ovis aries

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    Melatonin is a pleiotrophic hormone, synthesised primarily by the pineal gland under the control of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). It not only provides a hormonal signal of darkness but also has neuroprotective properties. Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterised by abnormal motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms. There is growing evidence, particularly from animal models, that circadian rhythms may also be disturbed in HD. We measured two circadian‐regulated hormones, melatonin and cortisol, in plasma samples collected around‐the‐clock from normal and presymptomatic transgenic HD sheep (Ovis aries) at 5 and 7 years of age, to assess SCN‐driven rhythms and the effect of genotype, sex and age. Melatonin‐related precursors and metabolites (tryptophan, serotonin, kynurenine) were also measured by liquid chromatography (LC)‐mass spectrometry (MS). At 5 years of age in both rams and ewes, plasma melatonin levels were significantly elevated in HD sheep. In ewes measured 2 years later, there was still a significant elevation of nocturnal melatonin. Furthermore, the daytime baseline levels of melatonin were significantly higher in HD sheep. Since increased melatonin could have global beneficial effects on brain function, we suggest that the increased melatonin measured in presymptomatic HD sheep is part of an autoprotective response to mutant huntingtin toxicity that may account, at least in part, for the late onset of disease that characterises HD

    Effect of nutrition of oocyte donor on the outcomes of somatic cell nuclear transfer in the sheep

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    The purpose of this study was to determine if the nutrition of the oocyte donor ewe influenced the success of somatic cell cloning. Merino ewes were fed at either a high- or a low-nutrition level for 3-5 mo before superovulation treatments. Freshly ovulated oocytes were enucleated and fused with serum-starved adult granulosa cells, and resulting reconstructed embryos were cultured for 6 days in modified synthetic oviduct fluid. Embryo cleavage and development to blastocysts were recorded, and good-quality embryos were transferred to synchronized recipient ewes either fresh or, on a few occasions, after vitrification. Pregnancies were monitored by ultrasonography from Day 40 of pregnancy, and offspring were delivered by either cesarean section or vaginal delivery. No differences occurred in the numbers of follicles aspirated, of oocytes recovered, or of oocytes utilizable for cloning between the high and low groups. Neither were there treatment differences in development to the blastocyst stage. However, transfer of embryos from the high group led to significantly more pregnancies and implanted fetuses. Also, more of the established pregnancies from the high group were carried to term, although this difference was not statistically significant. Lamb mortality was high, with half the live-born perishing soon after birth and more succumbing to various infections within days or weeks of birth, but no clear association between the offspring fate and the treatment group could be established. These results suggest that more research into the effect of nutrition on oocyte quality and its subsequent effect on cloning is warranted

    Brain urea increase is an early Huntington's disease pathogenic event observed in a prodromal transgenic sheep model and HD cases

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    Significance We present evidence for the presymptomatic dysregulation of urea metabolism in Huntington’s disease (HD). We identified increased levels of a urea transporter transcript and other osmotic regulators in the striatum of our prodromal sheep model of HD and a concomitant increase in striatal and cerebellar urea. Elevated urea was also detected in brain tissue from postmortem HD cases, including cases with low-level cell loss, implying that increased brain urea in HD is not just a product of end-stage cachexia. Disruption of urea metabolism is known to cause neurologic impairment and could initiate neurodegeneration and the symptoms of HD. Our findings suggest that lowering brain levels of urea and/or ammonia would be a worthwhile therapeutic target in HD.</jats:p

    Voxel-based morphometry results showing differences between control sheep and Batten affected sheep, at the baseline scan.

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    <p>Coronal sections are pseudocoloured to show changes in grey matter (A), or white matter (B). The colour bar shows Student’s t-score with 8 degrees of freedom. The position of the sequential coronal sections indicated by the lines on the accompanying sagittal section.</p

    Batten disease affected sheep body weight changes and <i>post mortem</i> brain appearance.

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    <p>(A) Mean (± SEM) body weight of control (blue) and Batten disease affected sheep (red) from birth to 20 months of age shows that growth of Batten disease affected animals stopped at around 14 months. The dotted line indicates the time of transfer from the home farm to the MRI facility. (B) Comparison of gross anatomy of brains from a control sheep (left) and the least affected wether (male, 939), and least affected ewe (female, 937) (centre and right respectively) shows pronounced atrophy of the cerebral cortex (Co) with relative sparing of the cerebellum (Cb). Brains were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde. Size bar in B represents 3cm.</p
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