The central nervous system of persons with Down syndrome presents cytoarchitectural abnormalities that likely result from gene-dosage effects affecting the expression of key developmental genes. To test this hypothesis, we have investigated the transcriptome of the cerebellum of the Ts1Cje mouse model of Down syndrome during postnatal development using microarrays and quantitative PCR (qPCR). Genes present in three copies were consistently overexpressed, with a mean ratio relative to euploid of 1.52 as determined by qPCR. Out of 63 three-copy genes tested, only five, nine and seven genes had ratios >2 or <1.2 at postnatal days 0 (P0), P15 and P30, respectively. This gene-dosage effect was associated with a dysregulation of the expression of some two-copy genes. Out of 8258 genes examined, the Ts1Cje/euploid ratios differed significantly from 1.0 for 406 (80 and 154 with ratios above 1.5 and below 0.7, respectively), 333 (11 above 1.5 and 55 below 0.7) and 246 genes (59 above 1.5 and 69 below 0.7) at P0, P15 and P30, respectively. Among the two-copy genes differentially expressed in the trisomic cerebellum, six homeobox genes, two belonging to the Notch pathway, were severely repressed. Overall, at P0, transcripts involved in cell differentiation and development were over-represented among the dysregulated genes, suggesting that cell differentiation and migration might be more altered than cell proliferation. Finally, global gene profiling revealed that transcription in Ts1Cje mice is more affected by the developmental changes than by the trisomic state, and that there is no apparent detectable delay in the postnatal development of the cerebellum of Ts1Cje mice.
H2 O2 production by rat brain in vivo was observed with a method based on the measurement of brain catalase. The administration to the rat of 3‐amino‐1, 2, 4‐triazole, an H2 O2‐ dependent inhibitor of catalase, caused progressive inhibition of brain catalase activity in both the supernatant and pellet fractions of homogenates of the striatum and prefrontal cortex. The prevention of catalase inhibition by prior administration of ethanol confirmed that catalase inhibition in vivo was dependent upon H2 O2. A significant portion of the catalase (30‐33%) appeared in the supernatant fraction from a slow‐speed homogenization procedure and was not significantly contaminated by either erythrocytes or capillaries. In the whole homogenate, less than 6% of the catalase activity was attributed to erythrocytes. Modification of intracellular monoamine oxidase activity by either pargyline or reserpine did not change the rate of inhibition of catalase by aminotriazole. A probable interpretation of these data is that H2 O2 generated by mitochondrial monoamine oxidase does not reach the catalase compartment; the catalase is contained in particles described by other investigators as the microperoxisomes of brain. In studies in vitro, the production of H2 O2 by rat brain mitochondria with either dopamine or serotonin as substrate was confirmed.
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