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Publication : TorsinA dysfunction causes persistent neuronal nuclear pore defects.

First Author  Pappas SS Year  2018
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  27
Issue  3 Pages  407-420
PubMed ID  29186574 Mgi Jnum  J:257005
Mgi Id  MGI:6112243 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddx405
Citation  Pappas SS, et al. (2018) TorsinA dysfunction causes persistent neuronal nuclear pore defects. Hum Mol Genet 27(3):407-420
abstractText  A critical challenge to deciphering the pathophysiology of neurodevelopmental disease is identifying which of the myriad abnormalities that emerge during CNS maturation persist to contribute to long-term brain dysfunction. Childhood-onset dystonia caused by a loss-of-function mutation in the AAA+ protein torsinA exemplifies this challenge. Neurons lacking torsinA develop transient nuclear envelope (NE) malformations during CNS maturation, but no NE defects are described in mature torsinA null neurons. We find that during postnatal CNS maturation torsinA null neurons develop mislocalized and dysfunctional nuclear pore complexes (NPC) that lack NUP358, normally added late in NPC biogenesis. SUN1, a torsinA-related molecule implicated in interphase NPC biogenesis, also exhibits localization abnormalities. Whereas SUN1 and associated nuclear membrane abnormalities resolve in juvenile mice, NPC defects persist into adulthood. These findings support a role for torsinA function in NPC biogenesis during neuronal maturation and implicate altered NPC function in dystonia pathophysiology.
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