4.5 Article

Homozygosity of BACHD rats not only causes strong behavioral deficits in young female rats but also a reduced breeding success

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1761, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2021.147396

Keywords

Huntington's disease; Behavioral analysis; Homozygosity; Sex differences; Learning and memory; Breeding success

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Researchers introduced the mutant huntingtin gene into a rodent model and found significant symptoms in female homozygous BACHD rats, while male homozygous BACHD rats showed mild symptoms similar to previously published studies.
Huntington's disease is known to be a purely genetic disease based on an expansion of a CAG base triplet repeat in the coding region of the Huntingtin gene. Some years ago, researchers were able to introduce the extensive full-length gene sequence of the mutant huntingtin gene into a rodent model. The resulting BACHD rat is already well characterized for behavioral deficits. So far, all analyses in this preclinical rat model were performed in male hemizygous animals. As homozygosity of transgenic models often causes an amplification of the phenotype and female HD patients present a stronger phenotype compared to men, we established a homozygous breeding colony and tested 2 and 5 months old homozygous male and female BACHD rats in a behavioral test battery. The tests included the grip strength test, Rota Rod, elevated plus maze, passive avoidance, and Barnes maze test. Our results show strong deficits in young female homozygous BACHD rats including increased body weight, motor deficits, muscle weakness, reduced anxiety and hypoactivity, as well as learning and memory deficits. Analysis of male homozygous BACHD rats showed only weak disease symptoms, similar compared to male hemizygous BACHD rats of already published studies. Evaluation of the breeding success showed that homozygous BACHD have a reduced number of pups at the time of birth that even decreases until weaning. Our results suggest that the phenotype of homozygous male BACHD rats barely differs from already published results of hemizygous BACHD rats while female homozygous BACHD rats display strong and early alterations.

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