About   Help   FAQ
Phenotypes associated with this allele
Allele Symbol
Allele Name
Allele ID
Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu
gene trap EUCE0085f05, Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen GmbH
MGI:4377985
Summary 1 genotype
Jump to Allelic Composition Genetic Background Genotype ID
hm1
Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu/Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu involves: 129P2/OlaHsd * C57BL/6 MGI:5790094


Genotype
MGI:5790094
hm1
Allelic
Composition
Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu/Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu
Genetic
Background
involves: 129P2/OlaHsd * C57BL/6
Find Mice Using the International Mouse Strain Resource (IMSR)
Mouse lines carrying:
Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu mutation (0 available); any Spg11 mutation (85 available)
phenotype observed in females
phenotype observed in males
N normal phenotype

Spastic and ataxic gait in Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu/Spg11Gt(EUCE0085f05)Hmgu mice

behavior/neurological
• progressive spastic gait disorder with cerebellar ataxia
• progressive worsening of motor performance with significantly reduced latency to fall off an accelerating rotating rod at 13 months of age
• significantly increased number of falls in the beam walking test at 13 months of age
• progressive spastic gait disorder with cerebellar ataxia starting at 12 months of age, as quantified by the foot-base-angle at toe-off positions of the hindpaws which decreases with age, unlike in wild-type controls

growth/size/body
• progressive reduction of body weight starting around 12 months of age, consistent with deterioration of overall health status

nervous system
• significantly reduced brain weight at 16 months of age
• significantly reduced brain size at 16 months of age
• however, normal brain size and weight at 2 months of age
• no thinning of the corpus callosum at 16 months of age
• activation of astrocytes in cortical and cerebellar neurons at 16 months of age, as shown by GFAP staining
• however, no evidence for astrocyte activation in the hippocampus, vestibular nuclei, inferior olivary nucleus, or spinal cord
• axonal swelling filled with autophagic vesicles found in the corticospinal tract at 16 months of age
• intraneuronal accumulation of autofluoerscent material in the cortex, cerebellum, and other CNS regions including the hippocampus, vestibular nuclei, inferior olivary nucleus, and spinal cord at 16 months of age
• cells accumulating autofluorescence co-label with beta-galactosidase, Ctip2, SatB2, parvalbumin or calbindin, suggesting that principal cells as well as inhibitory interneurons are affected
• large clusters of irregularly shaped electron-dense lipofuscin-like deposits and membranous structures filled with autophagic material are found in cortical, hippocampal pyramidal neurons, and spinal cord neurons at 16 months of age
• marked accumulation of lipofuscin-like material in hippocampal pyramidal neurons at 16 months of age
• however, normal numbers of hippocampal pyramidal neurons at 16 months of age
• large autofluorescent structures in Purkinje cells, often clustered, and surrounded by membranes that stain positive for the lysosomal marker protein Lamp1
• vesicular structure contents stain positive p62 (a receptor for cargo destined to be degraded by autophagy), suggesting that autofluorescent deposits represent undegraded autolysosomal material
• ultrastructural analysis of Purkinje cells shows clusters of vesicular structures filled with autophagic material as well as abnormally shaped electron-dense lipofuscin-like deposits, while only a few lipofuscin particles are found in wild-type controls
• neuron loss in the cortex and the cerebellum is preceded by intraneuronal accumulation of autofluorescent material, and paralleled by the activation of astrocytes as shown by GFAP staining
• degenerating neurons accumulate abnormal autolysosomes and autolysosome-related autofluorescent material
• severe loss of Purkinje cells by 16 months of age
• significant loss of large projection neurons in cortical layers V and VI of the motor cortex at 16 months but not at 8 months of age
• normal neuron numbers in layers I-III (where most of the commissural neurons reside) at 16 months of age
• normal numbers of spinal cord motoneurons at 16 months of age
• large diameter axon fibers are reduced by ~50% at 8 months and ~75% at 16 months in the lumbar corticospinal tract (L4), and by 56% at 16 months in the cervical corticospinal tract
• however, basic structure of motor endplates is relatively normal

cellular
• mutant MEFs display accumulation of autolysosomes (defined as vesicles labeled for both Lamp1 and p62) and decreased lysosome numbers (defined as Lamp1-positive vesicles that do not co-stain for p62) relative to wild-type MEFs
• upon induction of autophagy by serum starvation for 6 h, lysosomes are significantly depleted in both wild-type and mutant MEFs; however, after 14 h of starvation, lysosome numbers return to baseline levels only in wild-type while they remain diminished in mutant MEFs
• lysosome numbers are already reduced in Purkinje cells and cortical motoneurons at 2 months of age, prior to accumulation of autofluorescent material or any signs of neurodegeneration
• mutant MEFs show increased levels of lipidated LC3 relative to wild-type MEFs, indicating impaired autolysosomal clearance; however, autophagy is not entirely blocked as LC3-II levels are further increased upon treatment with bafilomycin A1
• upon sustained (14 h) serum starvation, mutant MEFs show impaired recovery of lysosomes, consistent with a defect in autophagic lysosome reformation
• mutant MEFs show an increased number of autolysosomes as well as increased levels of LC3-II (the lipidated form of LC3 recruited to autophagosomal membranes) relative to wild-type MEFs, indicating impaired autolysosomal clearance
• in mutant MEFs, LC3-II levels are further increased upon treatment with bafilomycin A1, which inhibits autolysosome acidification and autolysosomal degradation
• however, lysosomal processing of the lysosomal protease cathepsin D and intralysosomal pH are normal

homeostasis/metabolism
• mutant MEFs show increased levels of lipidated LC3 relative to wild-type MEFs, indicating impaired autolysosomal clearance; however, autophagy is not entirely blocked as LC3-II levels are further increased upon treatment with bafilomycin A1
• upon sustained (14 h) serum starvation, mutant MEFs show impaired recovery of lysosomes, consistent with a defect in autophagic lysosome reformation

Mouse Models of Human Disease
DO ID OMIM ID(s) Ref(s)
hereditary spastic paraplegia 11 DOID:0110764 OMIM:604360
J:228803





Contributing Projects:
Mouse Genome Database (MGD), Gene Expression Database (GXD), Mouse Models of Human Cancer database (MMHCdb) (formerly Mouse Tumor Biology (MTB)), Gene Ontology (GO)
Citing These Resources
Funding Information
Warranty Disclaimer, Privacy Notice, Licensing, & Copyright
Send questions and comments to User Support.
last database update
11/12/2024
MGI 6.24
The Jackson Laboratory