Constitutive knockout of CTRP10 in mice resulted in impaired motor coordination and striking deficits in fine motor skills, particularly in females, despite preserved grip strength and motor learning.
Does CTRP10 deficiency impair motor function in mice?
Mice with constitutive knockout of CTRP10 evaluated for exploratory behaviors, memory, and motor function.
CTRP10 deficiency (knockout)
Wild-type mice (implied)
Motor function (rotarod task, beam walk, complex running wheel tasks)surrogate
CTRP10 deficiency in mice leads to impaired gross and fine motor function, particularly in females, associated with altered synaptic organization and reduced mitochondrial respiration in the motor cortex.
CTRP10, also known as C1QL2, is a secreted protein of the C1q family. In the central nervous system, CTRP10 is predominantly expressed by neurons and oligodendrocytes. Changes in brain expression of CTRP10 are associated with addiction, depression, and psychiatric disorder. CTRP10 also serves as a specific molecular marker for the excitatory neurons in the anterior thalamic nuclei complex, as well as for neurons that control proprioception and fine motor skills. Whether CTRP10 is required for nervous system control of behaviors is unknown. Here, we determine whether and how CTRP10 deficiency adversely impacts mouse behaviors. Constitutive knockout (KO) mice lacking CTRP10 have normal exploratory behaviors, spatial and recognition memory, and sensorimotor gating. While grip strength is preserved, Ctrp10 KO female mice show impaired motor coordination in the rotarod task; motor learning, however, is intact. Beam walk and complex running wheel tasks further indicate striking deficits in fine motor skills, with female KO mice showing markedly more pronounced phenotypes. Transcriptomic analyses show that CTRP10 loss alters biological pathways in the cerebellum and motor cortex related to synaptic organization, cell signaling, mitochondrial respiration, and locomotor behavior. Functional analysis also indicates reduced mitochondrial respiration in the motor cortex of KO mice. These combined changes likely contribute to motor function deficits in our KO animals. Collectively, our data uncover a novel central function of CTRP10 and provide genetic evidence that CTRP10 is required for optimal gross and fine motor function.
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Fangluo Chen
Johns Hopkins University
Muzna Saqib
Johns Hopkins University
Chantelle E. Terrillion
Johns Hopkins University
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Kennedy Krieger Institute
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Chen et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in CTRP10 deficiency. CTRP10 deficiency (Constitutive knockout) vs. Wild-type mice was evaluated on Motor function and behavior. Constitutive knockout of CTRP10 in mice resulted in impaired motor coordination and striking deficits in fine motor skills, particularly in females, despite preserved grip strength and motor learning.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2017ee76ec520ee9a1a685 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2026.111420