Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4315258 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A range of transgenic and knock-in mouse models of Huntington's disease have been created since identification in 1993 of the disease mutation in the HD gene. Knock-in models that express the full-length mutant protein tend to exhibit less severe behavioural deficits than transgenic models and so require more sensitive tasks in order to reveal impairments. To achieve this, we therefore used a Serial Implicit Learning Task (SILT), which measures serial reaction times to visual stimuli, requiring detection and responding in both predictable and unpredictable locations in the 9-hole operant chamber. We have previously reported that knock-in HdhQ92/Q92 mice exhibit a modest impairment in learning the SILT tasks at 4 months of age, prior to the formation of overt neuronal nuclear inclusions. In the present study we have explored the time course of the development of impairments from 5 to 14 months of age. The deficit previously found in accuracy and reaction time was present at all ages examined in these HdhQ92/Q92 mice; the deficit was not progressive, and did not correlate with the evolution of neuronal nuclear inclusions.
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Authors
Rebecca C. Trueman, Simon P. Brooks, Lesley Jones, Stephen B. Dunnett,