Galdzicki Z, Siarey R, Pearce R, Stoll J, Rapoport S I
Section on Brain Physiology and Metabolism, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Brain Res Brain Res Rev. 2001 Apr;35(2):115-45. doi: 10.1016/s0926-6410(00)00074-4.
Down syndrome (DS, trisomy 21, Ts21) is the most common known cause of mental retardation. In vivo structural brain imaging in young DS adults, and post-mortem studies, indicate a normal brain size after correction for height, and the absence of neuropathology. Functional imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) shows normal brain glucose metabolism, but fewer significant correlations between metabolic rates in different brain regions than in controls, suggesting reduced functional connections between brain circuit elements. Cultured neurons from Ts21 fetuses and from fetuses of an animal model for DS, the trisomy 16 (Ts16) mouse, do not differ from controls with regard to passive electrical membrane properties, including resting potential and membrane resistance. On the other hand, the trisomic neurons demonstrate abnormal active electrical and biochemical properties (duration of action potential and its rates of depolarization and repolarization, altered kinetics of active Na(+), Ca(2+) and K(+) currents, altered membrane densities of Na(+) and Ca(2+) channels). Another animal model, the adult segmental trisomy 16 mouse (Ts65Dn), demonstrates reduced long-term potentiation and increased long-term depression (models for learning and memory related to synaptic plasticity) in the CA1 region of the hippocampus. Evidence suggests that the abnormalities in the trisomy mouse models are related to defective signal transduction pathways involving the phosphoinositide cycle, protein kinase A and protein kinase C. The phenotypes of DS and its mouse models do not involve abnormal gene products due to mutations or deletions, but result from altered expression of genes on human chromosome 21 or mouse chromosome 16, respectively. To the extent that the defects in signal transduction and in active electrical properties, including synaptic plasticity, that are found in the Ts16 and Ts65Dn mouse models, are found in the brain of DS subjects, we postulate that mental retardation in DS results from such abnormalities. Changes in timing and synaptic interaction between neurons during development can lead to less than optimal functioning of neural circuitry and signaling then and in later life.
唐氏综合征(DS,21三体综合征,Ts21)是已知导致智力迟钝最常见的原因。对年轻唐氏综合征成年患者进行的活体脑结构成像以及尸检研究表明,校正身高后大脑大小正常,且不存在神经病理学改变。正电子发射断层扫描(PET)功能成像显示大脑葡萄糖代谢正常,但与对照组相比,不同脑区代谢率之间的显著相关性较少,这表明脑回路元件之间的功能连接减少。来自Ts21胎儿以及唐氏综合征动物模型(16三体,Ts16)小鼠胎儿的培养神经元,在包括静息电位和膜电阻在内的被动电膜特性方面与对照组并无差异。另一方面,三体神经元表现出异常的主动电特性和生化特性(动作电位的持续时间及其去极化和复极化速率、主动钠(Na+)、钙(Ca2+)和钾(K+)电流的动力学改变、Na+和Ca2+通道的膜密度改变)。另一种动物模型,成年节段性16三体小鼠(Ts65Dn),在海马体CA1区表现出长时程增强减弱和长时程抑制增强(与突触可塑性相关的学习和记忆模型)。有证据表明,三体小鼠模型中的异常与涉及磷酸肌醇循环、蛋白激酶A和蛋白激酶C的信号转导通路缺陷有关。唐氏综合征及其小鼠模型的表型并非由突变或缺失导致的异常基因产物引起,而是分别由人类21号染色体或小鼠16号染色体上基因表达的改变所致。就Ts16和Ts65Dn小鼠模型中发现的信号转导缺陷以及包括突触可塑性在内的主动电特性缺陷在唐氏综合征患者大脑中也存在而言,我们推测唐氏综合征患者的智力迟钝是由这些异常导致的。发育过程中神经元之间时间和突触相互作用的变化会导致神经回路和信号在当时及以后的生活中功能欠佳。