Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome

Loss-of-function mutations in SGCE, which encodes ε-sarcoglycan (ε-SG), cause myoclonus-dystonia syndrome (OMIM159900, DYT11). A “major” ε-SG protein derived from CCDS5637.1 (NM_003919.2) and a “brain-specific” protein, that includes sequence derived from alternative exon 11b (CCDS47642.1, NM_001099...

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Main Authors: Jianfeng Xiao, Satya R. Vemula, Yi Xue, Mohammad M. Khan, Francesca A. Carlisle, Adrian J. Waite, Derek J. Blake, Ioannis Dragatsis, Yu Zhao, Mark S. LeDoux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-02-01
Series:Neurobiology of Disease
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0969996116302625
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author Jianfeng Xiao
Satya R. Vemula
Yi Xue
Mohammad M. Khan
Francesca A. Carlisle
Adrian J. Waite
Derek J. Blake
Ioannis Dragatsis
Yu Zhao
Mark S. LeDoux
spellingShingle Jianfeng Xiao
Satya R. Vemula
Yi Xue
Mohammad M. Khan
Francesca A. Carlisle
Adrian J. Waite
Derek J. Blake
Ioannis Dragatsis
Yu Zhao
Mark S. LeDoux
Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
Neurobiology of Disease
Sgce
Dystonia
Myoclonus
Sarcoglycans
Gene trap
author_facet Jianfeng Xiao
Satya R. Vemula
Yi Xue
Mohammad M. Khan
Francesca A. Carlisle
Adrian J. Waite
Derek J. Blake
Ioannis Dragatsis
Yu Zhao
Mark S. LeDoux
author_sort Jianfeng Xiao
title Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
title_short Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
title_full Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
title_fullStr Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
title_sort role of major and brain-specific sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome
publisher Elsevier
series Neurobiology of Disease
issn 1095-953X
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Loss-of-function mutations in SGCE, which encodes ε-sarcoglycan (ε-SG), cause myoclonus-dystonia syndrome (OMIM159900, DYT11). A “major” ε-SG protein derived from CCDS5637.1 (NM_003919.2) and a “brain-specific” protein, that includes sequence derived from alternative exon 11b (CCDS47642.1, NM_001099400.1), are reportedly localized in post- and pre-synaptic membrane fractions, respectively. Moreover, deficiency of the “brain-specific” isoform and other isoforms derived from exon 11b may be central to the pathogenesis of DYT11. However, no animal model supports this hypothesis. Gene-trapped ES cells (CMHD-GT_148G1-3, intron 9 of NM_011360) were used to generate a novel Sgce mouse model (C57BL/6J background) with markedly reduced expression of isoforms derived from exons 3′ to exon 9 of NM_011360. Among those brain regions analyzed in adult (2 month-old) wild-type (WT) mice, cerebellum showed the highest relative expression of isoforms incorporating exon 11b. Homozygotes (SgceGt(148G1)Cmhd/Gt(148G1)Cmhd or SgceGt/Gt) and paternal heterozygotes (Sgcem+/pGt, m-maternal, p-paternal) showed 60 to 70% reductions in expression of total Sgce. Although expression of the major (NM_011360) and brain-specific (NM_001130189) isoforms was markedly reduced, expression of short isoforms was preserved and relatively small amounts of chimeric ε-SG/β-galactosidase fusion protein was produced by the Sgce gene-trap locus. Immunoaffinity purification followed by mass spectrometry assessments of Sgcem+/pGt mouse brain using pan- or brain-specific ε-SG antibodies revealed significant reductions of ε-SG and other interacting sarcoglycans. Genome-wide gene-expression data using RNA derived from adult Sgcem+/pGt mouse cerebellum showed that the top up-regulated genes were involved in cell cycle, cellular development, cell death and survival, while the top down-regulated genes were associated with protein synthesis, cellular development, and cell death and survival. In comparison to WT littermates, Sgcem+/pGt mice exhibited “tiptoe” gait and stimulus-induced appendicular posturing between Postnatal Days 14 to 16. Abnormalities noted in older Sgcem+/pGt mice included reduced body weight, altered gait dynamics, and reduced open-field activity. Overt spontaneous or stimulus-sensitive myoclonus was not apparent on the C57BL/6J background or mixed C57BL/6J-BALB/c and C57BL/6J-129S2 backgrounds. Our data confirm that mouse Sgce is a maternally imprinted gene and suggests that short Sgce isoforms may compensate, in part, for deficiency of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms.
topic Sgce
Dystonia
Myoclonus
Sarcoglycans
Gene trap
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0969996116302625
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spelling doaj-4a2699bf291c44c08161fe58f410f8fd2021-03-22T12:44:55ZengElsevierNeurobiology of Disease1095-953X2017-02-01985265Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndromeJianfeng Xiao0Satya R. Vemula1Yi Xue2Mohammad M. Khan3Francesca A. Carlisle4Adrian J. Waite5Derek J. Blake6Ioannis Dragatsis7Yu Zhao8Mark S. LeDoux9Department of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USAMRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff University School of Medicine, Cathays, Cardiff, CF24 4HQ, Great Britain, United KingdomMRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff University School of Medicine, Cathays, Cardiff, CF24 4HQ, Great Britain, United KingdomMRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff University School of Medicine, Cathays, Cardiff, CF24 4HQ, Great Britain, United KingdomDepartment of Physiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USADepartment of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USA; Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USA; Corresponding author at: University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Department of Neurology, 847 Monroe Avenue, Suite 226 Johnson Building, Memphis, TN, 38163, USA.Loss-of-function mutations in SGCE, which encodes ε-sarcoglycan (ε-SG), cause myoclonus-dystonia syndrome (OMIM159900, DYT11). A “major” ε-SG protein derived from CCDS5637.1 (NM_003919.2) and a “brain-specific” protein, that includes sequence derived from alternative exon 11b (CCDS47642.1, NM_001099400.1), are reportedly localized in post- and pre-synaptic membrane fractions, respectively. Moreover, deficiency of the “brain-specific” isoform and other isoforms derived from exon 11b may be central to the pathogenesis of DYT11. However, no animal model supports this hypothesis. Gene-trapped ES cells (CMHD-GT_148G1-3, intron 9 of NM_011360) were used to generate a novel Sgce mouse model (C57BL/6J background) with markedly reduced expression of isoforms derived from exons 3′ to exon 9 of NM_011360. Among those brain regions analyzed in adult (2 month-old) wild-type (WT) mice, cerebellum showed the highest relative expression of isoforms incorporating exon 11b. Homozygotes (SgceGt(148G1)Cmhd/Gt(148G1)Cmhd or SgceGt/Gt) and paternal heterozygotes (Sgcem+/pGt, m-maternal, p-paternal) showed 60 to 70% reductions in expression of total Sgce. Although expression of the major (NM_011360) and brain-specific (NM_001130189) isoforms was markedly reduced, expression of short isoforms was preserved and relatively small amounts of chimeric ε-SG/β-galactosidase fusion protein was produced by the Sgce gene-trap locus. Immunoaffinity purification followed by mass spectrometry assessments of Sgcem+/pGt mouse brain using pan- or brain-specific ε-SG antibodies revealed significant reductions of ε-SG and other interacting sarcoglycans. Genome-wide gene-expression data using RNA derived from adult Sgcem+/pGt mouse cerebellum showed that the top up-regulated genes were involved in cell cycle, cellular development, cell death and survival, while the top down-regulated genes were associated with protein synthesis, cellular development, and cell death and survival. In comparison to WT littermates, Sgcem+/pGt mice exhibited “tiptoe” gait and stimulus-induced appendicular posturing between Postnatal Days 14 to 16. Abnormalities noted in older Sgcem+/pGt mice included reduced body weight, altered gait dynamics, and reduced open-field activity. Overt spontaneous or stimulus-sensitive myoclonus was not apparent on the C57BL/6J background or mixed C57BL/6J-BALB/c and C57BL/6J-129S2 backgrounds. Our data confirm that mouse Sgce is a maternally imprinted gene and suggests that short Sgce isoforms may compensate, in part, for deficiency of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0969996116302625SgceDystoniaMyoclonusSarcoglycansGene trap