Accumulation of SOD1 mutants in postnatal motoneurons does not cause motoneuron pathology or motoneuron disease

MM Lino, C Schneider, P Caroni - Journal of Neuroscience, 2002 - Soc Neuroscience
MM Lino, C Schneider, P Caroni
Journal of Neuroscience, 2002Soc Neuroscience
Transgenic mice expressing high levels of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS)-
associated mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) under the control of a human SOD1
minigene (hMg) accumulate mutant protein ubiquitously and develop motoneuron disease.
However, restricted expression of SOD1 mutants in neurons apparently does not cause
motor impairments in mice. Here, we investigated the possible pathogenic roles of mutant
SOD1 accumulation in motoneurons. First, we used a Thy1 expression cassette to drive high …
Transgenic mice expressing high levels of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS)-associated mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) under the control of a human SOD1 minigene (hMg) accumulate mutant protein ubiquitously and develop motoneuron disease. However, restricted expression of SOD1 mutants in neurons apparently does not cause motor impairments in mice. Here, we investigated the possible pathogenic roles of mutant SOD1 accumulation in motoneurons. First, we used a Thy1 expression cassette to drive high constitutive expression of transgene in postnatal mouse neurons, including upper and lower motoneurons. Second, we expressed human (h) SOD1(G93A) and hSOD1(G85R) as transgenes (i.e., two SOD1 mutants with aggressive pathogenic properties in inducing FALS). Third, in addition to clinical signs of disease, we monitored early signs of disease onset and pathogenesis, including muscle innervation, astrogliosis in the spinal cord, and accumulation of ubiquitinated deposits in motoneurons and astrocytes. We report that high-level expression and accumulation of the mutant proteins in neurons failed to produce any detectable sign of pathology or disease in these transgenic mice. Crossing hMg-SOD1(G93A) mice with Thy1-SOD1(G93A) mice produced double-transgenic mice with spinal cord SOD1(G93A) levels that were approximately twofold higher than in the hMg-SOD1(G93A) single transgenics but did not affect the onset or progression of pathology or motoneuron disease. The accumulation of mutant SOD1 in postnatal motoneurons is thus not sufficient and probably also not critical to induce or accelerate motoneuron disease in FALS mice. The pathogenic process in FALS may involve non-neuronal cells, and selective vulnerability of motoneurons to this process may lead to motoneuron pathology and disease.
Soc Neuroscience