Homanics G E, DeLorey T M, Firestone L L, Quinlan J J, Handforth A, Harrison N L, Krasowski M D, Rick C E, Korpi E R, Mäkelä R, Brilliant M H, Hagiwara N, Ferguson C, Snyder K, Olsen R W
Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA 15261, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997 Apr 15;94(8):4143-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.94.8.4143.
gamma-Aminobutyric acid type A receptors (GABA(A)-Rs) mediate the bulk of rapid inhibitory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. The beta3 subunit is an essential component of the GABA(A)-R in many brain regions, especially during development, and is implicated in several pathophysiologic processes. We examined mice harboring a beta3 gene inactivated by gene targeting. GABA(A)-R density is approximately halved in brain of beta3-deficient mice, and GABA(A)-R function is severely impaired. Most beta3-deficient mice die as neonates; some neonatal mortality, but not all, is accompanied by cleft palate. beta3-deficient mice that survive are runted until weaning but achieve normal body size by adulthood, although with reduced life span. These mice are fertile but mothers fail to nurture offspring. Brain morphology is grossly normal, but a number of behaviors are abnormal, consistent with the widespread location of the beta3 subunit. The mice are very hyperactive and hyperresponsive to human contact and other sensory stimuli, and often run continuously in tight circles. When held by the tail, they hold all paws in like a ball, which is frequently a sign of neurological impairment. They have difficulty swimming, walking on grids, and fall off platforms and rotarods, although they do not have a jerky gait. beta3-deficient mice display frequent myoclonus and occasional epileptic seizures, documented by electroencephalographic recording. Hyperactivity, lack of coordination, and seizures are consistent with reduced presynaptic inhibition in spinal cord and impaired inhibition in higher cortical centers and/or pleiotropic developmental defects.
γ-氨基丁酸A型受体(GABA(A)受体)介导中枢神经系统中大部分快速抑制性突触传递。β3亚基是许多脑区GABA(A)受体的重要组成部分,尤其是在发育过程中,并且与多种病理生理过程有关。我们研究了通过基因靶向使β3基因失活的小鼠。在β3基因缺陷小鼠的脑中,GABA(A)受体密度大约减半,并且GABA(A)受体功能严重受损。大多数β3基因缺陷小鼠在新生儿期死亡;部分新生儿死亡(但不是全部)伴有腭裂。存活下来的β3基因缺陷小鼠在断奶前发育迟缓,但成年后体型正常,尽管寿命缩短。这些小鼠可育,但母鼠无法哺育后代。脑形态大体正常,但一些行为异常,这与β3亚基广泛分布的位置一致。这些小鼠非常多动,对人类接触和其他感觉刺激反应过度,并且经常持续不停地绕着小圈奔跑。当被抓住尾巴时,它们会把所有爪子缩成一团,这常常是神经损伤的迹象。它们游泳、在网格上行走有困难,会从平台和旋转杆上掉落,尽管它们没有抽搐步态。通过脑电图记录证实,β3基因缺陷小鼠频繁出现肌阵挛和偶尔的癫痫发作。多动、缺乏协调性和癫痫发作与脊髓中突触前抑制减少以及高级皮质中枢抑制受损和/或多效性发育缺陷一致。