Hypothermia-induced dystonia and abnormal cerebellar activity in a mouse model with a single disease-mutation in the sodium-potassium pump

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Abstract

Mutations in the neuron-specific α3isoform of the Na+/K+-ATPase are found in patients suffering from Rapid onset Dystonia Parkinsonism and Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood, two closely related movement disorders. We show that mice harboring a heterozygous hot spot disease mutation, D801Y (α3+/D801Y), suffer abrupt hypothermia-induced dystonia identified by electromyographic recordings. Single-neuron in vivo recordings in awake α3+/D801Ymice revealed irregular firing of Purkinje cells and their synaptic targets, the deep cerebellar nuclei neurons, which was further exacerbated during dystonia and evolved into abnormal high-frequency burst-like firing. Biophysically, we show that the D-to-Y mutation abolished pump-mediated Na+/K+exchange, but allowed the pumps to bind Na+and become phosphorylated. These findings implicate aberrant cerebellar activity in α3isoform-related dystonia and add to the functional understanding of the scarce and severe mutations in the α3isoform Na+/K+-ATPase.

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Isaksen, T. J., Kros, L., Vedovato, N., Holm, T. H., Vitenzon, A., Gadsby, D. C., … Lykke-Hartmann, K. (2017). Hypothermia-induced dystonia and abnormal cerebellar activity in a mouse model with a single disease-mutation in the sodium-potassium pump. PLoS Genetics, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006763

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