The Atp7b-/- mouse model of neurological copper toxicity and Wilson Disease

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $414,812 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Wilson Disease (WD) is an inherited disorder of copper metabolism caused by mutation in the ATP7B gene that causes pathogenic copper accumulation in the brain and liver. WD neurologic symptoms can be severe or fatal and include dystonia, ataxia and Parkinson-like tremor. Patients often present a combination of features. WD patients may also present with psychiatric symptoms (often prior to WD diagnosis) including behavioral changes, personality changes, anxiety and depression. A major challenge in WD treatment is that neurological symptoms often worsen when copper-lowering drugs such as D-penicillamine are administered. Zinc salts are an alternative treatment for WD and less associated with neurological degradation. However, treatment efficacy of zinc for liver disease appears to be limited, and improvement in neurologic symptoms is comparatively slow. A significant obstacle in research on neurologic WD treatment is the limited development of pre-clinical animal models to study disease mechanisms and treatments. Rodent models of WD have been invaluable to define hepatic mechanisms of copper toxicosis, while utility in neurologic WD is not well explored. The Atp7b-/- mouse is a highly characterized rodent model of WD liver pathology, revealing defects in lipid metabolism, liver damage and relative age-of-onset compared to humans. We recently used this model to identify altered zinc metabolism as mechanism of copper toxicity in WD. Brain copper in the Atp7b-/- mouse increases throughout life, which parallels brain copper accumulation in WD patients. This work will determine the utility of the Atp7b-/- mouse for pre-clinical studies of neurologic WD. Proposed experiments will define behavioral and molecular responses of altered brain copper levels as well as the impacts of WD treatments on these phenotypes. An integrative approach will test the hypothesis that the Atp7b-/- mouse models neurologic WD for mechanistic disease and treatment studies. This hypothesis will be tested through execution of the following three Specific Aims: Aim 1: Determine the extent to which Atp7b-/-, Atp7b+/- mice exhibit motor and behavioral impairments. Behavioral phenotypes will be determined for male and female animals of both wildtype/heterozygous (Atp7b+/+/Atp7b+/-) and knockout (Atp7b-/-) genotypes for three treatment conditions (untreated, D-penicillamine, or zinc); Aim 2: Determine the effects of Zn or D-penicillamine treatment on the concentration of trace metals and markers of oxidative stress in the brain for Atp7b-/-, Atp7b+/- and wild type mice; Aim 3: Determine the changes in Cu and Zn handling protein levels in target brain regions of animals subjected to control, Zn or chelator treatments. Completion of this study will provide a foundation for treatment-focused experiments in the Atp7b-/- mouse and WD patients to improve patient outcomes. Identifying effects of copper toxicity in the brain will also build insight into other neurological disorders with copp...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10574028
Project number
1R21NS130270-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
Principal Investigator
JASON L BURKHEAD
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$414,812
Award type
1
Project period
2022-09-20 → 2025-08-31