Pharmacologic rescue of lethal seizures in mice deficient in succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase
Mice, Knockout
0301 basic medicine
Base Sequence
Genotype
Brain
Hydroxybutyrates
Aldehyde Oxidoreductases
Immunohistochemistry
3. Good health
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Receptors, GABA-B
Seizures
Phenobarbital
Phenytoin
Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein
Animals
Anticonvulsants
Succinate-Semialdehyde Dehydrogenase
DNA Primers
DOI:
10.1038/ng727
Publication Date:
2002-07-26T08:32:58Z
AUTHORS (13)
ABSTRACT
Succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH5A1, encoding SSADH deficiency is a defect of 4-aminobutyric acid (GABA) degradation that manifests in humans as 4-hydroxybutyric (gamma-hydroxybutyric, GHB) aciduria. It is characterized by a non-specific neurological disorder including psychomotor retardation, language delay, seizures, hypotonia and ataxia. The current therapy, vigabatrin (VGB), is not uniformly successful. Here we report the development of Aldh5a1-deficient mice. At postnatal day 16-22 Aldh5a1-/- mice display ataxia and develop generalized seizures leading to rapid death. We observed increased amounts of GHB and total GABA in urine, brain and liver homogenates and detected significant gliosis in the hippocampus of Aldh5a1-/- mice. We found therapeutic intervention with phenobarbital or phenytoin ineffective, whereas intervention with vigabatrin or the GABAB receptor antagonist CGP 35348 (ref. 2) prevented tonic-clonic convulsions and significantly enhanced survival of the mutant mice. Because neurologic deterioration coincided with weaning, we hypothesized the presence of a protective compound in breast milk. Indeed, treatment of mutant mice with the amino acid taurine rescued Aldh5a1-/- mice. These findings provide insight into pathomechanisms and may have therapeutic relevance for the human SSADH deficiency disease and GHB overdose and toxicity.
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