Journal article
Effects of chronic stress on the onset and progression of Huntington's disease in transgenic mice
C Mo, T Renoir, AJ Hannan
Neurobiology of Disease | Published : 2014
Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by a tandem repeat mutation encoding an expanded polyglutamine tract. Our previous work showed that memory deficits in HD transgenic mice could be accelerated by increased levels of stress hormone, while memory in WT mice remained unaffected. HD patients experience higher levels of stress compared to the general population and symptoms of HD also include motor, cognitive, psychiatric, sexual and olfactory abnormalities, and an associated decline in activities of daily living. Therefore we investigated the impact of a robust stressor (i.e. restraint) on the onset and progression of a range of behavioral phenotypes in R6/1 transge..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by an ARC FT3 Future Fellowship (FT100100835) to AJH. AJH is an Honorary NHMRC Senior Research Fellow. CM is a University of Melbourne Australian Postgraduate Award Scholar. TR is supported by an ARC Discovery Early Career Research Award. The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health acknowledges the support from the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Grant.