Altered motor coordination, vocal communication, and cerebellar circuit connectivity in mice carrying a near-complete human chromosome 21

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Date

11-22-2025

Journal

Translational psychiatry

DOI

10.1038/s41398-025-03744-2

Abstract

Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) frequently face challenges with motor control and coordination, affecting their daily physical movements. The neural mechanism underlying motor coordination deficits in DS remains poorly understood. Using the TcMAC21 mice, which carry an extra nearly complete human chromosome 21 in addition to two copies of mouse orthologs, we characterized altered motor function and identified cerebellar circuit dysfunction underlying motor adaptation deficits. We also revealed disrupted Purkinje neuron organization and hypertrophied synapses from climbing fiber afferents, accompanied by specific deficits in cerebellar-dependent behaviors, including motor learning, vocalizations, and maternal care. In vivo calcium recordings showed stochastic decoupling of cerebellar nuclear activity from locomotion states, while cerebello-thalamic synchrony was reduced. Selective elevation of intracellular calcium in developing Purkinje neurons recapitulates motor adaptation deficits and climbing fiber phenotype observed in the TcMAC21 model, supporting the conclusion that cell-autonomous calcium signaling is a functionally relevant feature. This study provides a framework for understanding both motor and cerebellar deficits in DS, extending beyond cortico-centric models.

Department

Pediatrics

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