March
9, 2006
Wobbler Mouse Gene ID May Unlock New Doors
A mutation in a
gene for the vps54 protein,
which acts as a cellular traffic
manager, leads to the abnormal
gait and reduced strength that
characterize a much-studied mouse
with a neurologic disease, says
a U.S., Danish and German research
team.
The mouse, known
as wobbler, was first
identified at the University of
Edinburgh (Scotland) in 1956.
Before mouse models of amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS) based
on mutated SOD1 genes were developed
in the mid-1990s, the wobbler
was a popular method of simulating
an ALS environment in which to
test treatments.
For the last decade,
SOD1 mutant mice have held center
stage in ALS research, but not
everyone is convinced they’re
the only, or the best, models
for all forms of ALS. (Only about
2 percent of ALS patients have
mutations in an SOD1 gene.)
Thomas Schmitt-John
at the University of Aarhus in
Denmark and colleagues, who published
their gene identification in the
November issue of Nature Genetics,
say they’ll now develop
mice missing vps54 and study its
disruption in cells in lab dishes.
“I think that
the SOD1 mice are surely good
animal models for the familial
ALS cases associated with SOD1,”
Schmitt-John said. “But
ALS is a disease with a variety
of molecular causes, and the precise
mechanism leading to the death
of the neurons [nerve cells] might
differ dramatically [in each].
So I think that more animal models
are required.”
Walter Bradley,
who directs the Kessenich Family
MDA/ALS Center at the University
of Miami, and Hiroshi Mitsumoto,
who co-directs the Eleanor and
Lou Gehrig MDA/ALS Research Center
at Columbia University in New
York, have worked with the wobbler
mouse intermittently for several
decades.
Bradley, who says
the wobbler mouse shows evidence
of impaired transport along its
motor neuron axons (long fibers),
has speculated that vps54 is involved
in loading material onto a transport
system. It’s one of several
vesicular protein sorters
that assign compounds to bubbles,
or vesicles, for shipment
to other parts of the cell.
Substances can move
from one cell compartment to another
via vesicles that bud off from
one compartment, move along a
cellular conveyor belt called
a microtubule, and then
fuse with another compartment.
Schmitt-John says
the vps54 finding indicates to
him that “vesicle trafficking
should be considered as a critical
factor in ALS pathology.”