Abnormalities of motor function, transcription and cerebellar structure in mouse models of THAP1 dystonia

被引:37
|
作者
Ruiz, Marta [1 ]
Perez-Garcia, Georgina [3 ]
Ortiz-Virumbrales, Maitane [3 ]
Meneret, Aurelie [2 ]
Morant, Andrika [3 ]
Kottwitz, Jessica [3 ]
Fuchs, Tania [3 ]
Bonet, Justine [3 ]
Gonzalez-Alegre, Pedro [5 ]
Hof, Patrick R. [4 ]
Ozelius, Laurie J. [2 ,3 ]
Ehrlich, Michelle E. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, Dept Pediat, New York, NY 10029 USA
[2] Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, Dept Genet & Genom Sci, New York, NY 10029 USA
[3] Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, Dept Neurol, New York, NY 10029 USA
[4] Icahn Sch Med Mt Sinai, Dept Neurosci, New York, NY 10029 USA
[5] Univ Iowa Hosp & Clin, Dept Neurol, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
PRIMARY TORSION DYSTONIA; DYT1; DYSTONIA; TRANSGENIC MOUSE; IN-VIVO; GENE; MICE; DYSFUNCTION; PROTEIN; MUTANT; DOMAIN;
D O I
10.1093/hmg/ddv384
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
DYT6 dystonia is caused by mutations in THAP1 [Thanatos-associated (THAP) domain-containing apoptosis-associated protein] and is autosomal dominant and partially penetrant. Like other genetic primary dystonias, DYT6 patients have no characteristic neuropathology, and mechanisms by which mutations in THAP1 cause dystonia are unknown. Thap1 is a zinc-finger transcription factor, and most pathogenic THAP1 mutations are missense and are located in the DNA-binding domain. There are also nonsense mutations, which act as the equivalent of a null allele because they result in the generation of small mRNA species that are likely rapidly degraded via nonsense-mediated decay. The function of Thap1 in neurons is unknown, but there is a unique, neuronal 50-kDa Thap1 species, and Thap1 levels are auto-regulated on the mRNA level. Herein, we present the first characterization of two mouse models of DYT6, including a pathogenic knockin mutation, C54Y and a null mutation. Alterations in motor behaviors, transcription and brain structure are demonstrated. The projection neurons of the deep cerebellar nuclei are especially altered. Abnormalities vary according to genotype, sex, age and/or brain region, but importantly, overlap with those of other dystonia mouse models. These data highlight the similarities and differences in age-and cell-specific effects of a Thap1 mutation, indicating that the pathophysiology of THAP1 mutations should be assayed at multiple ages and neuronal types and support the notion of final common pathways in the pathophysiology of dystonia arising from disparate mutations.
引用
收藏
页码:7159 / 7170
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] THAP1 Role in focal dystonia?
    Ozelius, Laurie J.
    Bressman, Susan B.
    NEUROLOGY, 2010, 74 (03) : 192 - 193
  • [2] THAP1 Associated Dystonia: An NBIA Mimic
    Agarwal, Ayush
    Garg, Divyani
    Rajan, Roopa
    Garg, Ajay
    Srivastava, Achal Kumar
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2023, 10 (12): : 1815 - 1817
  • [3] Novel THAP1 Mutations in Primary Dystonia
    Ledoux, Mark
    Xiao, Jianfeng
    Pfeiffer, Ronald F.
    Zhao, Yu
    Bastian, Robert
    Perlmutter, Joel S.
    Tabbal, Samer D.
    Karimi, Morvarid
    Paniello, Randal
    Racette, Brad A.
    Blitzer, Andrew
    Batish, Dev
    Simon, David K.
    Tarsy, Daniel
    Wszolek, Zbigniew K.
    Uitti, Ryan J.
    Van Gerpen, Jay A.
    Hedera, Peter
    Truong, Daniel D.
    Frei, Karen P.
    NEUROLOGY, 2009, 73 (04) : 331 - 331
  • [4] Trisomy 8 Mosaicism and dystonia: a THAP1 overdose?
    Fois, A.
    Tchan, M.
    Fung, V.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2017, 32
  • [5] Novel THAP1 sequence variants in primary dystonia
    Xiao, J.
    Zhao, Y.
    Bastian, R. W.
    Perlmutter, J. S.
    Racette, B. A.
    Tabbal, S. D.
    Karimi, M.
    Paniello, R. C.
    Wszolek, Z. K.
    Uitti, R. J.
    Van Gerpen, J. A.
    Simon, D. K.
    Tarsy, D.
    Hedera, P.
    Truong, D. D.
    Frei, K. P.
    Batish, S. Dev
    Blitzer, A.
    Pfeiffer, R. F.
    Gong, S.
    LeDoux, M. S.
    NEUROLOGY, 2010, 74 (03) : 229 - 238
  • [6] Psychiatric features of GNAL and THAP1 mutation dystonia
    Deegan, E.
    Glickman, A.
    Sarva, H.
    Ortega, R. A.
    Raymond, D.
    Ozelius, L. J.
    Groves, M.
    Bressman, S. B.
    Saunders-Pullman, R.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2015, 30 : S505 - S505
  • [7] Dystonia-specific mutations in THAP1 alter transcription of genes associated with neurodevelopment and myelin
    Domingo, Aloysius
    Yadav, Rachita
    Shah, Shivangi
    Hendriks, William T.
    Erdin, Serkan
    Gao, Dadi
    O'Keefe, Kathryn
    Currall, Benjamin
    Gusella, James F.
    Sharma, Nutan
    Ozelius, Laurie J.
    Ehrlich, Michelle E.
    Talkowski, Michael E.
    Bragg, D. Cristopher
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2021, 108 (11) : 2145 - 2158
  • [8] THAP1 mutations and dystonia phenotypes: Genotype phenotype correlations
    Xiromerisiou, Georgia
    Houlden, Henry
    Scarmeas, Nikolaos
    Stamelou, Maria
    Kara, Eleanna
    Hardy, John
    Lees, Andrew J.
    Korlipara, Prasad
    Limousin, Patricia
    Paudel, Reema
    Hadjigeorgiou, Georgios M.
    Bhatia, Kailash P.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2012, 27 (10) : 1290 - 1294
  • [9] The Dystonia Gene DYT1 Is Repressed by the Transcription Factor THAP1 (DYT6)
    Kaiser, Frank J.
    Osmanoric, Alma
    Rakovic, Aleksandar
    Erogullari, Alev
    Uflacker, Nils
    Braunholz, Diana
    Lohnau, Thora
    Orolicki, Slobodanka
    Albrecht, Melanie
    Gillessen-Kaesbach, Gabriele
    Klein, Christine
    Lohmann, Katja
    ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2010, 68 (04) : 554 - 559
  • [10] Lack of association between cancer and THAP1 mutation dystonia
    Glickman, A.
    Ortega, R. A.
    Sarva, H.
    San Luciano, M.
    Raymond, D.
    Ozelius, L. J.
    Bressman, S. B.
    Saunders-Pullman, R.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2015, 30 : S508 - S508