mortality/aging
• knockouts start to die at P19; all are dead by P24
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growth/size/body
• mutants stop growing in the second week after birth
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behavior/neurological
• mutants show severe motor dysfunction in second postnatal week
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• by P15, mice are almost unable to move
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nervous system
• synaptic charge transfer shows a significantly slower time course in striatal neurons than in control neurons
• mean decay time constants for fast and slow constituents are significantly increased compared to control; fast decay constant is increased by ~20%, while slow decay constant is increased by >100%
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• in diaphragm muscle, miniature end plate potentials (mEPPs; spontaneous release events) at the neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) show a 10-fold increase in frequency compared to diaphragms of wild-type littermate
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• release is mostly desynchronized in a subpopulation of striatal neurons
• mutant synapses show desynchronization of evoked vesicle release during repetitive stimulation even at frequencies of 10 Hz
• 10-fold increase in delayed release in NMJs is seen compared to controls
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• in phrenic nerve, amplitude and quantal content of end plate potentials, EPP) are decreased ~2-fold compared to control; rate of increase of EPPs is 3-fold lower compared to controls at NMJs
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• large degree of PPF is observed compared to control neurons
• at 10 and 20 Hz stimulation, NMJs exhibit continued facilitation without depression whereas initial facilitation followed by moderate depression is observed in controls
• initial EPP amplitude in 2-fold lower in mutants by facilitation increases to steady state levels similar to control
• NMJs exhibit a failure rate at 10 and 20 Hz of 6 and 1.5% respectively, whereas controls NMJs show no failures
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