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Messing, M., Galbreath, E.J., Head, M.W., Goldman,
J. E., and Brenner, M. (1998) Fatal encephalopathy with astrocyte inclusions in GFAP
transgenic mice. Amer. J. Pathol. 152: 391-398.
Abstract: Increased expression of glial
fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is a hallmark of gliosis, the astrocytic hypertrophy that
occurs during a wide variety of diseases of the central nervous system. To determine
whether this increase in GFAP expression per se alters astrocyte function, we generated
transgenic mice that carry copies of the human GFAP gene driven by its own promoter.
Astrocytes of these mice are hypertrophic, up-regulate small heat-shock proteins, and
contain inclusion bodies identical histologically and antigenically to the Rosenthal
fibers of Alexander's disease. Mice in the highest expressing lines die by the second
postnatal week. The results support the notion that Alexander's disease is a disorder of
astrocytes, and provide an animal model for studying the causes and consequences of
inclusion body disease.
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