AI Article Synopsis

  • Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD, BMD) are neuromuscular disorders linked to cognitive and behavioral issues, with studies suggesting that the severity of these issues may be connected to the loss of different dystrophin proteins.
  • This study focused on Dp71-null mice, which lack the shortest dystrophin isoform, revealing abnormal social behaviors, vocalization, and changes in anxiety levels, but no impact on myopathy or learning/memory related to fear.
  • The findings suggest that mutations affecting Dp71 might contribute to social and emotional problems commonly seen in DMD, supporting the idea that losing multiple dystrophin isoforms can exacerbate behavioral issues.

Article Abstract

Background: The Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD, BMD) are neuromuscular disorders commonly associated with diverse cognitive and behavioral comorbidities. Genotype-phenotype studies suggest that severity and risk of central defects in DMD patients increase with cumulative loss of different dystrophins produced in CNS from independent promoters of the DMD gene. Mutations affecting all dystrophins are nevertheless rare and therefore the clinical evidence on the contribution of the shortest Dp71 isoform to cognitive and behavioral dysfunctions is limited. In this study, we evaluated social, emotional and locomotor functions, and fear-related learning in the Dp71-null mouse model specifically lacking this short dystrophin.

Results: We demonstrate the presence of abnormal social behavior and ultrasonic vocalization in Dp71-null mice, accompanied by slight changes in exploratory activity and anxiety-related behaviors, in the absence of myopathy and alterations of learning and memory of aversive cue-outcome associations.

Conclusions: These results support the hypothesis that distal DMD gene mutations affecting Dp71 may contribute to the emergence of social and emotional problems that may relate to the autistic traits and executive dysfunctions reported in DMD. The present alterations in Dp71-null mice may possibly add to the subtle social behavior problems previously associated with the loss of the Dp427 dystrophin, in line with the current hypothesis that risk and severity of behavioral problems in patients increase with cumulative loss of several brain dystrophin isoforms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11344925PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12993-024-00246-xDOI Listing

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