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. 2025 Mar:385:115123.
doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2024.115123. Epub 2024 Dec 20.

Ndufs4 inactivation in glutamatergic neurons reveals swallow-breathing discoordination in a mouse model of Leigh syndrome

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Ndufs4 inactivation in glutamatergic neurons reveals swallow-breathing discoordination in a mouse model of Leigh syndrome

Alyssa Huff et al. Exp Neurol. 2025 Mar.

Abstract

Swallowing, both nutritive and non-nutritive, is highly dysfunctional in children with Leigh Syndrome (LS) and contributes to the need for both gastrostomy and tracheostomy tube placement. Without these interventions aspiration of food, liquid, and mucus occur resulting in repeated bouts of respiratory infection. No study has investigated whether mouse models of LS, a neurometabolic disorder, exhibit dysfunctions in neuromuscular activity of swallow and breathing integration. We used a genetic mouse model of LS in which the NDUFS4 gene is knocked out (KO) specifically in Vglut2 or Gad2 neurons. We found increased variability of the swallow motor pattern, disruption in breathing regeneration post swallow, and water-induced apneas only in Vglut2 KO mice. These physiological changes likely contribute to weight loss and premature death seen in this mouse model. Following chronic hypoxia (CH) exposure, there was no difference in swallow motor pattern, breathing regeneration, weight, and life expectancy in the Vglut2-Ndufs4-KO CH mice compared to control CH, indicating a phenotypic rescue or prevention. These findings show that like patients with LS, Ndufs4 mouse models of LS exhibit swallow impairments as well as swallow-breathing discoordination alongside the other phenotypic traits described in previous studies. Understanding this aspect of LS will open roads for the development of future more efficacious therapeutic intervention for this illness.

Keywords: Airway protection; Dysphagia; Hypoxia; Mitochondrial disease.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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