Trisomy 21 Alters Motor Coordination, Vocal Communication, and Cerebellar Circuit Connectivity in the TcMAC21 Mouse

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Abstract

Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) frequently face challenges with motor control and coordination, affecting their daily physical movements. Speech and language difficulties are also well-documented in DS, but the degree to which these challenges relate to underlying motor coordination deficits remains poorly understood. Using a DS mouse model containing triplication of a nearly complete human chromosome 21, the TcMAC21 mouse, we identified cerebellar circuit dysfunction as a convergent mechanism for both motor and linguistic impairments. Systematic analysis revealed disrupted Purkinje cell organization throughout development, accompanied by specific deficits in cerebellar-dependent behaviors including motor learning, vocalization, and maternal care. Structural measurements and targeting by cell-specific DREADDs uncovered disrupted calcium homeostasis in Purkinje neurons during critical periods of climbing fiber refinement as one contributing factor. In vivo neurophysiological recording in TcMAC21 mice revealed reduced cerebello-thalamic synchrony during locomotor activity. These findings identify calcium signaling as a key developmental pathway linking chromosomal trisomy to cerebellar circuit dysfunction, providing a novel framework for understanding both motor and linguistic deficits in DS that extends beyond traditional cortico-centric models.

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