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Citations to this article

TorsinA hypofunction causes abnormal twisting movements and sensorimotor circuit neurodegeneration
Chun-Chi Liang, … , Frank Chi, William T. Dauer
Chun-Chi Liang, … , Frank Chi, William T. Dauer
Published June 17, 2014
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2014;124(7):3080-3092. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI72830.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 42

TorsinA hypofunction causes abnormal twisting movements and sensorimotor circuit neurodegeneration

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Abstract

Lack of a preclinical model of primary dystonia that exhibits dystonic-like twisting movements has stymied identification of the cellular and molecular underpinnings of the disease. The classical familial form of primary dystonia is caused by the DYT1 (ΔE) mutation in TOR1A, which encodes torsinA, AAA+ ATPase resident in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticular/nuclear envelope. Here, we found that conditional deletion of Tor1a in the CNS (nestin-Cre Tor1aflox/–) or isolated CNS expression of DYT1 mutant torsinA (nestin-Cre Tor1aflox/ΔE) causes striking abnormal twisting movements. These animals developed perinuclear accumulation of ubiquitin and the E3 ubiquitin ligase HRD1 in discrete sensorimotor regions, followed by neurodegeneration that was substantially milder in nestin-Cre Tor1aflox/ΔE compared with nestin-Cre Tor1aflox/– animals. Similar to the neurodevelopmental onset of DYT1 dystonia in humans, the behavioral and histopathological abnormalities emerged and became fixed during CNS maturation in the murine models. Our results establish a genetic model of primary dystonia that is overtly symptomatic, and link torsinA hypofunction to neurodegeneration and abnormal twisting movements. These findings provide a cellular and molecular framework for how impaired torsinA function selectively disrupts neural circuits and raise the possibility that discrete foci of neurodegeneration may contribute to the pathogenesis of DYT1 dystonia.

Authors

Chun-Chi Liang, Lauren M. Tanabe, Stephanie Jou, Frank Chi, William T. Dauer

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Total citations by year

Year: 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 Total
Citations: 3 3 6 7 11 8 5 5 12 17 10 5 92
Citation information
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Citations to this article in year 2022 (7)

Title and authors Publication Year
Molecular Pathology of Laminopathies
J Shin, H Worman
Annual review of pathology 2022
p97/UBXD1 Generate Ubiquitylated Proteins That Are Sequestered into Nuclear Envelope Herniations in Torsin-Deficient Cells
S Prophet, B Naughton, C Schlieker
International journal of molecular sciences 2022
A dystonia mouse model with motor and sequencing deficits paralleling human disease
Kernodle K, Bakerian AM, Cropsey A, Dauer WT, Leventhal DK
Behavioural Brain Research 2022
Cerebellar Dysfunction as a Source of Dystonic Phenotypes in Mice.
Brown AM, van der Heijden ME, Jinnah HA, Sillitoe RV
Cerebellum (London, England) 2022
Atypical nuclear envelope condensates linked to neurological disorders reveal nucleoporin-directed chaperone activities.
Prophet SM, Rampello AJ, Niescier RF, Gentile JE, Mallik S, Koleske AJ, Schlieker C
Nature Cell Biology 2022
Electrophysiological characterization of the striatal cholinergic interneurons in Dyt1 ΔGAG knock-in mice
Xing H, Yokoi F, Walker AL, Torres-Medina R, Liu Y, Li Y
2022
Quantification of Behavioral Deficits in Developing Mice With Dystonic Behaviors
Van Der Heijden ME, Gill JS, Rey Hipolito AG, Salazar Leon LE, Sillitoe RV
2022

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