Is neuron-vascular communication disturbed in the delayed prenatal brain development of a mouse model of down syndrome?

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Abstract

Developmental retardation of the brain with reduced cortical neurogenesis is observed in Ts1Cje mice, a model of Down syndrome (DS) as it is in people with DS; however, the mechanisms and the responsible gene(s) remain unknown. The goal of the present study is to establish a therapeutic approach for treating the delayed brain development in DS. To achieve this, we have utilized multiple OMICS analyses, including proteomics and transcriptomics, to uncover the molecular alterations in the brains of DS model mice. Furthermore, we have elucidated that a transcriptional factor, the Erg gene, which is coded in the trisomic region, contributed to reduced cortical neurogenesis in the embryo of a DS mouse model by a molecular genetic technique, the ``in vivo gene subtraction method''. In the current review, I will introduce our recent work, the identification of the gene responsible for delayed brain development in the DS mouse model and will discuss the possibility that blood vessel dysfunction may be associated with reduced embryonic neurogenesis in DS.

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Ishihara, K. (2021). Is neuron-vascular communication disturbed in the delayed prenatal brain development of a mouse model of down syndrome? In Yakugaku Zasshi (Vol. 141, pp. 369–373). Pharmaceutical Society of Japan. https://doi.org/10.1248/yakushi.20-00198-5

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