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Researchers report that they have found a gene essential for
normal levels of anxiety and aggression.

Evan Deneris
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Calling it the Pet-1 gene, researchers at the CWRU School of
Medicine Department of Neurosciences say that when this gene is
removed or "knocked out" in a mouse, aggression and anxiety in
adults are greatly elevated compared to a control (also called
wild type) mouse. Other neurologic functions, such as motor coordination,
feeding and locomotor activity, do not appear altered in the knockout
mouse.
Anxiety and aggression are normal and important behaviors that
allow individuals to respond appropriately to threats or cope
with a challenging environment. However, it is clear that uncontrollable
or excessive anxiety and aggression can be counterproductive.
"The Pet-1 knockout mouse we've made is very likely to represent
a new model for gaining a greater understanding of human disorders
characterized by heightened anxiety and violence," said Evan Deneris,
principal investigator of the study and a neuroscientist at CWRU.
The study is published in the January 23 issue of the science
journal Neuron.
Previously, Deneris' lab showed that in the brain, Pet-1 is active
only in serotonin nerve cells or neurons, a relatively small number
of cells (among the trillions of neurons in a human brain, only
a few hundred thousand produce serotonin) that profoundly affect
emotions.
Serotonin is a chemical that acts as a messenger or neurotransmitter
allowing neurons to communicate with one another in the brain
and spinal cord. It is important for ensuring an appropriate level
of anxiety and aggression. Defective serotonin neurons have been
linked to excessive anxiety, impulsive violence and depression
in humans.
Antidepressant drugs such as Prozac and Zoloft work by increasing
serotonin activity and are highly effective at treating many of
these disorders. But it is unknown why some people have dysfunctional
serotonin neurons and whether this can be caused by defects in
genes that are normally required for their early development.
"We have now shown that Pet-1 is required specifically for fetal
development of serotonin neurons," Deneris said.
In mice missing this gene, most serotonin neurons fail to be
generated in the fetus and the ones that remain are defective.
This leads to very low serotonin levels throughout the developing
brain, which in turn results in altered behavior in adults.
"This is the first gene shown to impact adult emotional behavior
through specific control of fetal serotonin neuron development,"
Deneris said.
Deneris and his colleagues employed sensitive tests of aggression
and anxiety to compare the behavior of the knockout mice to wild
type mice. One such aggression test measures a mouse's response
time to an intruder mouse entering its territory. The Pet-1 knockout
mice attacked intruders much more quickly and more often than
wild type mice. In fact, knockout mice often would not engage
in normal exploratory behavior directed toward the intruder before
attacking it.
Excessive anxiety-like behavior was evident in another test measuring
the amount of time a mouse spends in open, unprotected areas of
a test chamber compared to closed, protected areas. Unlike normal
mice, which will enter and explore an unprotected portion of the
test chamber, the Pet-1 knockout mice avoided this area all together,
indicating abnormal anxiety-like behavior.
The human and mouse serotonin systems share many anatomical and
functional features, and the same Pet-1 gene is present in the
human genome. Therefore, Deneris' discovery creates the first
animal model for gaining a greater understanding of the causes
of abnormal anxiety and aggression brought about through defective
early serotonin neuron development. Deneris also sees this knockout
mouse being used as a model for screening new drugs that can treat
both aggression and anxiety.
"If in fact particular genetic variants of Pet-1 are associated
with excessive anxiety or violent activity in humans, then tests
to detect these variants might be useful for early diagnosis of
people who may be at risk for developing these abnormal behaviors,"
Deneris says.
His lab plans more studies in mice to see how the gene affects
sleep-wake patterns, learning and memory and sexual behavior-all
functions controlled in part by serotonin.
Lead authors on the study are Timothy J. Hendricks and Dmitry
V. Fyodorov, who were graduate students in Deneris's lab at the
time of the study. Other authors are, from CWRU: Lauren J. Wegman,
Nadia B. Lelutiu, Elizabeth A. Pehek, Bryan Yamamoto and Jerry
Silver; and, from Baylor College of Medicine, Edwin J. Weeber
and J. David Sweatt.
Videos displaying aggressive behavior of Pet-1 knockout mice
can be viewed at http://neurowww.cwru.edu/faculty/deneris.shtml;
click Movies Link.
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