Cell-specific expression of wild-type MeCP2 in mouse models of Rett syndrome yields insight about pathogenesis

Matías Alvarez-Saavedra(Centro de Estudios Científicos), Mauricio Sáez(Austral University of Chile), Dongcheul Kang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Huda Y. Zoghbi(Baylor College of Medicine), Juan I. Young(Centro de Estudios Científicos)
Human Molecular Genetics
July 17, 2007
Cited by 74

Abstract

Rett syndrome (RTT), a leading cause of mental retardation with autistic features in females, is caused by mutations in the gene encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2). RTT is characterized by a diverse set of neurological features that includes cognitive, motor, behavioral and autonomic disturbances. The diverse features suggest that specific neurons contribute to particular phenotypes and raise the question whether restoring MeCP2 function in a cell-specific manner will rescue some of the phenotypes seen in RTT. To address this, we generated transgenic mice expressing inducible MeCP2 under the control of the brain-specific promoters calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CamKII) or neuron-specific enolase (Eno2) and bred them onto mouse models lacking functional MeCP2. Expression of normal MeCP2 in either CamKII or Eno2 distribution was unable to prevent the appearance of most of the phenotypes of the RTT mouse models. These results suggest that most RTT phenotypes are caused either by disruption of complex neural networks involving neurons throughout the brain or by disruption of the function of specific neurons outside of the broad CamKII or Eno2 distribution.


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