Early biomarkers of Williams-Beuren syndrome: a preclinical study in the CD mouse model

Publication date

2023-01-25T17:15:55Z

2023-01-25T17:15:55Z

2023-01-21

2023-01-25T17:15:55Z

Abstract

Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by a chromosomic microdeletion (7q11.23). WBS has been modeled by a mouse line having a complete deletion (CD) of the equivalent mouse locus. This model has been largely used to investigate the etiopathological mechanisms of WBS, although pharmacological therapies have not been identified yet. Surprisingly, CD mice were so far mainly tested in adulthood, despite the developmental nature of WBS and the critical relevance of early timing for potential treatments. Here we provide for the first time a phenotypic characterization of CD mice of both sexes during infancy and adolescence, i.e., between birth and 7 weeks of age. CD pups of both sexes showed reduced body growth, delayed sensory development, and altered patterns of ultrasonic vocalizations and exploratory behaviors. Adolescent CD mice showed reduced locomotion and acoustic startle response, and altered social interaction and communication, the latter being more pronounced in female mice. Juvenile CD mutants of both sexes also displayed reduced brain weight, cortical and hippocampal dendritic length, and spine density. Our findings highlight the critical relevance of early neurobehavioral alterations as biomarkers of WBS pathology, underlying the importance of adolescence for identifying novel therapeutic targets for this neurological disorder.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

MDPI

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12030391

Cells, 2023, vol. 12, p. 391

https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12030391

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cc-by (c) Giannoccaro, Silvia et al., 2023

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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