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Publication : Biotin tagging of MeCP2 in mice reveals contextual insights into the Rett syndrome transcriptome.

First Author  Johnson BS Year  2017
Journal  Nat Med Volume  23
Issue  10 Pages  1203-1214
PubMed ID  28920956 Mgi Jnum  J:251147
Mgi Id  MGI:6103672 Doi  10.1038/nm.4406
Citation  Johnson BS, et al. (2017) Biotin tagging of MeCP2 in mice reveals contextual insights into the Rett syndrome transcriptome. Nat Med 23(10):1203-1214
abstractText  Mutations in MECP2 cause Rett syndrome (RTT), an X-linked neurological disorder characterized by regressive loss of neurodevelopmental milestones and acquired psychomotor deficits. However, the cellular heterogeneity of the brain impedes an understanding of how MECP2 mutations contribute to RTT. Here we developed a Cre-inducible method for cell-type-specific biotin tagging of MeCP2 in mice. Combining this approach with an allelic series of knock-in mice carrying frequent RTT-associated mutations (encoding T158M and R106W) enabled the selective profiling of RTT-associated nuclear transcriptomes in excitatory and inhibitory cortical neurons. We found that most gene-expression changes were largely specific to each RTT-associated mutation and cell type. Lowly expressed cell-type-enriched genes were preferentially disrupted by MeCP2 mutations, with upregulated and downregulated genes reflecting distinct functional categories. Subcellular RNA analysis in MeCP2-mutant neurons further revealed reductions in the nascent transcription of long genes and uncovered widespread post-transcriptional compensation at the cellular level. Finally, we overcame X-linked cellular mosaicism in female RTT models and identified distinct gene-expression changes between neighboring wild-type and mutant neurons, providing contextual insights into RTT etiology that support personalized therapeutic interventions.
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