TY - JOUR
T1 - A patient-enriched MEIS1 coding variant causes a restless legs syndrome-like phenotype in mice
AU - Leu, Chia Luen
AU - Lam, Daniel D.
AU - Salminen, Aaro V.
AU - Wefers, Benedikt
AU - Becker, Lore
AU - Garrett, Lillian
AU - Rozman, Jan
AU - Wurst, Wolfgang
AU - de Angelis, Martin Hrabě
AU - Hölter, Sabine M.
AU - Winkelmann, Juliane
AU - Williams, Rhîannan H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/5/1
Y1 - 2024/5/1
N2 - Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a neurological disorder characterized by uncomfortable or unpleasant sensations in the legs during rest periods. To relieve these sensations, patients move their legs, causing sleep disruption. While the pathogenesis of RLS has yet to be resolved, there is a strong genetic association with the MEIS1 gene. A missense variant in MEIS1 is enriched sevenfold in people with RLS compared to non-affected individuals. We generated a mouse line carrying this mutation (p.Arg272His/c.815G>A), referred to herein as Meis1R272H/R272H (Meis1 point mutation), to determine whether it would phenotypically resemble RLS. As women are more prone to RLS, driven partly by an increased risk of developing RLS during pregnancy, we focused on female homozygous mice. We evaluated RLS-related outcomes, particularly sensorimotor behavior and sleep, in young and aged mice. Compared to noncarrier littermates, homozygous mice displayed very few differences. Significant hyperactivity occurred before the lights-on (rest) period in aged female mice, reflecting the age-dependent incidence of RLS. Sensory experiments involving tactile feedback (rotarod, wheel running, and hotplate) were only marginally different. Overall, RLS-like phenomena were not recapitulated except for the increased wake activity prior to rest. This is likely due to the focus on young mice. Nevertheless, the Meis1R272H mouse line is a potentially useful RLS model, carrying a clinically relevant variant and showing an age-dependent phenotype.
AB - Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a neurological disorder characterized by uncomfortable or unpleasant sensations in the legs during rest periods. To relieve these sensations, patients move their legs, causing sleep disruption. While the pathogenesis of RLS has yet to be resolved, there is a strong genetic association with the MEIS1 gene. A missense variant in MEIS1 is enriched sevenfold in people with RLS compared to non-affected individuals. We generated a mouse line carrying this mutation (p.Arg272His/c.815G>A), referred to herein as Meis1R272H/R272H (Meis1 point mutation), to determine whether it would phenotypically resemble RLS. As women are more prone to RLS, driven partly by an increased risk of developing RLS during pregnancy, we focused on female homozygous mice. We evaluated RLS-related outcomes, particularly sensorimotor behavior and sleep, in young and aged mice. Compared to noncarrier littermates, homozygous mice displayed very few differences. Significant hyperactivity occurred before the lights-on (rest) period in aged female mice, reflecting the age-dependent incidence of RLS. Sensory experiments involving tactile feedback (rotarod, wheel running, and hotplate) were only marginally different. Overall, RLS-like phenomena were not recapitulated except for the increased wake activity prior to rest. This is likely due to the focus on young mice. Nevertheless, the Meis1R272H mouse line is a potentially useful RLS model, carrying a clinically relevant variant and showing an age-dependent phenotype.
KW - MEIS1
KW - mouse model
KW - restless legs syndrome
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193088280&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/sleep/zsae015
DO - 10.1093/sleep/zsae015
M3 - Article
C2 - 38314840
AN - SCOPUS:85193088280
SN - 0161-8105
VL - 47
JO - Sleep
JF - Sleep
IS - 5
ER -