Tuesday, April 15, 2014

C9orf72 nucleotide repeat structures initiate molecular cascades of disease

Aaron R. Haeusler,     Christopher J. Donnelly,     Goran Periz,     Eric A. J. Simko,     Patrick G. Shaw, Min-Sik Kim,     Nicholas J. Maragakis,     Juan C. Troncoso,     Akhilesh Pandey,     Rita Sattler, Jeffrey D. Rothstein     & Jiou Wang

                                                                             Nucleolar stress is a result of repeat-containing RNA transcripts from the C9orf72 HRE.

Abstract:

A hexanucleotide repeat expansion (HRE), (GGGGCC)n, in C9orf72 is the most common genetic cause of the neurodegenerative diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Here we identify a molecular mechanism by which structural polymorphism of the HRE leads to ALS/FTD pathology and defects. The HRE forms DNA and RNA G-quadruplexes with distinct structures and promotes RNA•DNA hybrids (R-loops). The structural polymorphism causes a repeat-length-dependent accumulation of transcripts aborted in the HRE region. These transcribed repeats bind to ribonucleoproteins in a conformation-dependent manner. Specifically, nucleolin, an essential nucleolar protein, preferentially binds the HRE G-quadruplex, and patient cells show evidence of nucleolar stress. Our results demonstrate that distinct C9orf72 HRE structural polymorphism at both DNA and RNA levels initiates molecular cascades leading to ALS/FTD pathologies, and provide the basis for a mechanistic model for repeat-associated neurodegenerative diseases

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Keywords:C9,f72,ribonucleoprotein

 
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