Construction and Behavioral Comparison of Two Mouse Models of Cerebral Palsy

Bull Exp Biol Med. 2025 Jan 6. doi: 10.1007/s10517-025-06320-2. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common neuromuscular disorder in children with no effective therapeutic methods. To examine CP, a large variety of methods and animal models was developed, the most popular are the hypoxic-ischemic (HI) injury and/or LPS injection in mice. In the presented work, HI and LPS were applied on the postnatal day 9 to humanized immunodeficiency mouse pups, thereupon 3 behavioral tests were performed in 8 weeks later. Both HI and LPS caused significant behavioral deficits assessed in the Rotarod test. In gait dynamics and open-field tests, HI and LPS caused significant behavioral deficits reported by some parameters, and the effect of HI was more severe. Additionally, HI and LPS produced the different effects on gait dynamics of the fore and hind paws. Thus, both HI and LPS induced the behavioral disorders in mice, but HI was more suitable for the development of humanized immunodeficiency mouse model of CP.

Keywords: cerebral palsy; humanized immunodeficiency mouse; hypoxia/ischemia; lipopolysaccharide; mouse model.