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Publication : Mitochondrial dysfunction precedes neurodegeneration in mahogunin (Mgrn1) mutant mice.

First Author  Sun K Year  2007
Journal  Neurobiol Aging Volume  28
Issue  12 Pages  1840-52
PubMed ID  17720281 Mgi Jnum  J:129981
Mgi Id  MGI:3770512 Doi  10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2007.07.012
Citation  Sun K, et al. (2007) Mitochondrial dysfunction precedes neurodegeneration in mahogunin (Mgrn1) mutant mice. Neurobiol Aging 28(12):1840-52
abstractText  Oxidative stress, ubiquitination defects and mitochondrial dysfunction are commonly associated with neurodegeneration. Mice lacking mahogunin ring finger-1 (MGRN1) or attractin (ATRN) develop age-dependent spongiform neurodegeneration through an unknown mechanism. It has been suggested that they act in a common pathway. As MGRN1 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase, proteomic analysis of Mgrn1 mutant and control brains was performed to explore the hypothesis that loss of MGRN1 causes neurodegeneration via accumulation of its substrates. Many mitochondrial proteins were reduced in Mgrn1 mutants. Subsequent assays confirmed significantly reduced mitochondrial complex IV expression and activity as well as increased oxidative stress in mutant brains. Mitochondrial dysfunction was obvious many months before onset of vacuolation, implicating this as a causative factor. Compatible with the hypothesis that ATRN and MGRN1 act in the same pathway, mitochondrial dysfunction and increased oxidative stress were also observed in the brains of Atrn mutants. Our results suggest that the study of Mgrn1 and Atrn mutant mice will provide insight into a causative molecular mechanism common to many neurodegenerative disorders.
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