Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
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The neuronal Golgi apparatus is fragmented in transgenic mice expressing a mutant human SOD1, but not in mice expressing the human NF-H gene.

Fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus (GA) of motor neurons was first described in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and later confirmed in transgenic mice expressing the G93A mutation of the gene encoding the enzyme Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1(G93A)) found in some cases of familial ALS. In these transgenic mice, however, the fragmentation of the neuronal GA was associated with cytoplasmic and mitochondrial vacuoles not seen in ALS. The present new series of transgenic mice expressing 14-17 trans gene copies of SOD1(G93A), compared to 25 copies in the mice we studied previously, showed consistent fragmentation of the GA of spinal cord motor neurons, axonal swellings, Lewy-like body inclusions in neurons and glia, but none of the cytoplasmic or mitochondrial vacuoles originally reported. Thus, this animal model recapitulates the clinical and most neuropathological findings of sporadic ALS. Neurofilaments (NF) accumulate in axons and, less often, in neuronal perikarya in most cases of sporadic ALS and they have been implicated in its pathogenesis. In order to investigate whether fragmentation of the neuronal GA also occurs in association with accumulation of perikaryal NFs, we studied the organelle in transgenic mice expressing the heavy subunit of human neurofilaments (NF-H) which developed a motor neuronopathy resembling ALS. The neuronal GA of mice expressing NF-H, however, was intact despite massive accumulation of NFs in both perikarya and axons of motor neurons. In contrast, in transgenic mice expressing SOD1(G93A), the GA was fragmented despite the absence of accumulation of perikaryal NFs. These findings suggest that, in transgenic mice with neuronopathies caused by the expression of mutant SOD1(G93A) or the human NF-H, the GA and the perikaryal NFs are independently involved in the pathogenesis. The evidence suggests that the GA plays a central role in the pathogenesis of the vast majority of sporadic ALS and in FALS with SOD1 mutations.

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