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

First Author  Xiao J Year  2017
Journal  Neurobiol Dis Volume  98
Pages  52-65 PubMed ID  27890709
Mgi Jnum  J:251780 Mgi Id  MGI:6101862
Doi  10.1016/j.nbd.2016.11.003 Citation  Xiao J, et al. (2017) Role of major and brain-specific Sgce isoforms in the pathogenesis of myoclonus-dystonia syndrome. Neurobiol Dis 98:52-65
abstractText  Loss-of-function mutations in SGCE, which encodes epsilon-sarcoglycan (epsilon-SG), cause myoclonus-dystonia syndrome (OMIM159900, DYT11). A "major" epsilon-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 (2month-old) wild-type (WT) mice, cerebellum showed the highest relative expression of isoforms incorporating exon 11b. Homozygotes (Sgce(Gt(148G1)Cmhd/Gt(148G1)Cmhd) or Sgce(Gt/Gt)) and paternal heterozygotes (Sgce(m+/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 epsilon-SG/beta-galactosidase fusion protein was produced by the Sgce gene-trap locus. Immunoaffinity purification followed by mass spectrometry assessments of Sgce(m+/pGt) mouse brain using pan- or brain-specific epsilon-SG antibodies revealed significant reductions of epsilon-SG and other interacting sarcoglycans. Genome-wide gene-expression data using RNA derived from adult Sgce(m+/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, Sgce(m+/pGt) mice exhibited "tiptoe" gait and stimulus-induced appendicular posturing between Postnatal Days 14 to 16. Abnormalities noted in older Sgce(m+/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.
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