Atypical Auditory Brainstem Response and Protein Expression Aberrations Related to ASD and Hearing Loss in the Adnp Haploinsufficient Mouse Brain
Autism is a wide spread neurodevelopmental disorder with growing morbidity rates, affecting more boys than girls worldwide. Activity-dependent neuroprotective protein ( ADNP ) was recently recognized as a leading gene accounted for 0.17% of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) cases globally. Respectively...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neurochemical research 2019-06, Vol.44 (6), p.1494-1507 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Autism is a wide spread neurodevelopmental disorder with growing morbidity rates, affecting more boys than girls worldwide.
Activity-dependent neuroprotective protein
(
ADNP
) was recently recognized as a leading gene accounted for 0.17% of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) cases globally. Respectively, mutations in the human
ADNP
gene (
ADNP
syndrome), cause multi-system body dysfunctions with apparent ASD-related traits, commencing as early as childhood. The
Adnp
haploinsufficient (
Adnp
+/−
) mouse model was researched before in relations to Alzheimer’s disease and autism.
Adnp
+/−
mice suffer from deficient social memory, vocal and motor impediments, irregular tooth eruption and short stature, all of which corresponds with reported phenotypes in patients with the
ADNP
syndrome. Recently, a more elaborated description of the
ADNP
syndrome was published, presenting impediments such as hearing disabilities in > 10% of the studied children. Irregular auditory brainstem response (ABR) has been connected to ASD-related cases and has been suggested as a potential hallmark for autism, allowing diagnosis of ASD risk and early intervention. Herein, we present detriment hearing in the
Adnp
+/−
mice with atypical ABR and significant protein expression irregularities that coincides with ASD and hearing loss studies in the brain. |
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ISSN: | 0364-3190 1573-6903 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11064-019-02723-6 |