A MURINE MODEL OF MUCOPOLYSACCHARIDOSIS-VII - GROSS AND MICROSCOPIC FINDINGS IN BETA-GLUCURONIDASE-DEFICIENT MICE

  • 1 January 1990
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 136  (1) , 207-217
Abstract
This resport describes the clinical and pathologic alterations found in mice that have a recessively inherited, essentially complete deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme beta-glucuronidase. Affected animals have a shortened life span and are dysmorphic and dwarfed. Abnormal gait and decreased joint mobility correlate with glycosaminoglycan accumulation in articular tissue and cartilaginous and bony lesions result in extensive skeletal deformation. In these enzyme-deficient animals, lysosomes, distended by fine fibrillar and granular storage material, are particularly prominent in the macrophage system but also occur in other tissues including the skeletal and central nervous systems. The clinical and pathologic abnormalities in these mutant mice closely parallel those identified in humans with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS). Therefore, these mice provide a well-defined genetic system for the analysis of the pathophysiology of mucopolysaccharidosis type VII, which was many features in common with the other MPS. The mutant mice provide an attractive animal model to test potential therapies for lysosomal storage disease.