The stretcher spontaneous neurodegenerative mutation models Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4D

F1000Res. 2013 Feb 13:2:46. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.2-46.v1. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

Mice affected by a spontaneous mutation which arose within our colony exhibited a neuromuscular phenotype involving tremor and characteristic stretching of the rear limbs. The mutant, named stretcher, was used to breed a backcross cohort for genetic mapping studies. The gene responsible for the mutant phenotype was mapped to a small region on mouse chromosome 15, with a LOD score above 20. Candidate genes within the region included the Ndrg1 gene. Examination of this gene in the mutant mouse strain revealed that exons 10 to 14 had been deleted. Mutations in the human orthologue are known to result in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4D (CMT4D) a severe early-onset disorder involving Schwann cell dysfunction and extensive demyelination. The stretcher mutant mouse is more severely affected than mice in which the Ndrg1 gene had been knocked out by homologous recombination. Our results demonstrate that the Ndrg1 (str) mutation provides a new model for CMT4D, and demonstrate that exons 10 to 14 of Ndrg1 encode amino acids crucial to the appropriate function of Ndrg1 in the central nervous system.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by Program Grants 516700 and 37612600 from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia to GM; NHMRC grants to LK; by grant DP110102067 from the Australian Research Council; and by L’Association Francaise contre les Myopathies (RHMK and LK). GM is supported by the Diabetes Research Foundation of Western Australia.