Brain Expression of CPB2 and Effects of Cpb2 Deficiency in Mouse Models of Behavior

Joost C. M. Meijers, Johanneke van der Harst, Pauline F. Marx, Peyman Sahbaie, David J. Clark, John Morser

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background Procarboxypeptidase B2 (proCPB2 or TAFI) is a zymogen that after activation cleaves C-terminal basic residues from peptides or proteins with many identified targets. A splice variant of CPB2 has been found in the brain lacking essential residues for its carboxypeptidase function. The aim was to determine CPB2 expression in the brain and effects of CPB2 deficiency (Cpb2-/-) on behavior. Materials and Methods Behavioral effects were tested by comparing Cpb2-/-mice in short-term (open field and elevated zero maze tests) and long-term (Phenotyper) observations with wild-type (WT) controls. Results Long-termobservation compared day 1 (acclimatizing to novel environment) to day 4 (fully acclimatized) with the inactive (day) and active (night) periods analyzed separately. Brain expression of CPB2 mRNA and protein was interrogated in publicly available databases. Long-term observation demonstrated differences between WT and Cpb2-/-mice in several parameters. For example, Cpb2-/-mice moved more frequently on both days 1 and 4, especially in the normally inactive periods. Cpb2-/-mice spent more time on the shelter and less time in it. Differences were more pronounced on day 4 after themice had fully acclimatized. In short-term observations, no differences were observed between Cpb2-/-mice and WT mice. Brain expression of CBP2 was not detectable in the human protein atlas. Databases of single-cell RNAseq did not show expression of CPB2 mRNA in either human or mouse brain. Conclusion Continuous observation of home-cage behavior suggests that Cpb2-/-mice aremore active thanWTmice, show different day night activity levels, andmight have a different way of processing information.
Original languageEnglish
JournalThrombosis and haemostasis
Early online date2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2023

Keywords

  • alternative splicing
  • anxiety
  • behavior
  • brain
  • carboxypeptidase B2

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