Fol. Biol. 2016, 62, 139-147

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2016062040139

Neurological Deficits of an Rps19(Arg67del) Model of Diamond-Blackfan Anaemia

Agnieszka Kubik-Zahorodna, B. Schuster, I. Kanchev, Radislav Sedláček

Laboratory of Transgenic Models of Diseases, Division BIOCEV, Institute of Molecular Genetics of the ASCR, v. v. i., Prague, Czech Republic

Received April 2016
Accepted May 2016

Diamond-Blackfan anaemia is a rare disease caused by insufficient expression of ribosomal proteins and is characterized by erythroid hypoplasia often accompanied by growth retardation, congenital craniofacial and limb abnormalities. In addition, Diamond-Blackfan anaemia patients also exhibit a number of behavioural abnormalities. In this study we describe the behavioural effects observed in a new mouse mutant carrying a targeted single amino acid deletion in the ribosomal protein RPS19. This mutant, created by the deletion of arginine 67 in RPS19, exhibits craniofacial, skeletal, and brain abnormalities, accompanied by various neurobehavioural malfunctions. A battery of behavioural tests revealed a moderate cognitive impairment and neuromuscular dysfunction resulting in profound gait abnormalities. This novel Rps19 mutant shows behavioural phenotypes resembling that of the human Diamond-Blackfan anaemia syndrome, thus creating the possibility to use this mutant as a unique murine model for studying the molecular basis of ribosomal protein deficiencies.

Funding

Financial support was given to R. S. by IGA (MZ13-UMG; NT15451-3).

References

38 live references