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Histidine Decarboxylase Deficiency Causes Tourette Syndrome: Parallel Findings in Humans and Mice
- Baldan, Lissandra Castellan;
- Williams, Kyle A;
- Gallezot, Jean-Dominique;
- Pogorelov, Vladimir;
- Rapanelli, Maximiliano;
- Crowley, Michael;
- Anderson, George M;
- Loring, Erin;
- Gorczyca, Roxanne;
- Billingslea, Eileen;
- Wasylink, Suzanne;
- Panza, Kaitlyn E;
- Ercan-Sencicek, A Gulhan;
- Krusong, Kuakarun;
- Leventhal, Bennett L;
- Ohtsu, Hiroshi;
- Bloch, Michael H;
- Hughes, Zoë A;
- Krystal, John H;
- Mayes, Linda;
- de Araujo, Ivan;
- Ding, Yu-Shin;
- State, Matthew W;
- Pittenger, Christopher
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.10.052Abstract
Tourette syndrome (TS) is characterized by tics, sensorimotor gating deficiencies, and abnormalities of cortico-basal ganglia circuits. A mutation in histidine decarboxylase (Hdc), the key enzyme for the biosynthesis of histamine (HA), has been implicated as a rare genetic cause. Hdc knockout mice exhibited potentiated tic-like stereotypies, recapitulating core phenomenology of TS; these were mitigated by the dopamine (DA) D2 antagonist haloperidol, a proven pharmacotherapy, and by HA infusion into the brain. Prepulse inhibition was impaired in both mice and humans carrying Hdc mutations. HA infusion reduced striatal DA levels; in Hdc knockout mice, striatal DA was increased and the DA-regulated immediate early gene Fos was upregulated. DA D2/D3 receptor binding was altered both in mice and in humans carrying the Hdc mutation. These data confirm histidine decarboxylase deficiency as a rare cause of TS and identify HA-DA interactions in the basal ganglia as an important locus of pathology.
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