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Publication : Epilepsy protein Efhc1/myoclonin1 is expressed in cells with motile cilia but not in neurons or mitotic apparatuses in brain.

First Author  Suzuki T Year  2020
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  10
Issue  1 Pages  22076
PubMed ID  33328576 Mgi Jnum  J:301342
Mgi Id  MGI:6490944 Doi  10.1038/s41598-020-79202-4
Citation  Suzuki T, et al. (2020) Epilepsy protein Efhc1/myoclonin1 is expressed in cells with motile cilia but not in neurons or mitotic apparatuses in brain. Sci Rep 10(1):22076
abstractText  EFHC1 gene encodes the myoclonin1 protein, also known as Rib72-1. Pathogenic variants in EFHC1 have been reported in patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME). Although several studies of immunohistological investigations reproducibly showed that the myoclonin1 is expressed in cells with flagella and motile cilia such as sperm, trachea and ependymal cells lining the brain ventricles, whether myoclonin1 is also expressed in neurons still remains controversial. Here we investigated myoclonin1 expression using widely-used polyclonal (mRib72-pAb) and self-made monoclonal (6A3-mAb) anti-myoclonin1 antibodies together with Efhc1 homozygous knock-out (Efhc1(-/-)) mice. All of the western blot, immunocytochemical, and immunohistochemical analyses showed that mRib72-pAb crossreacts with several mouse proteins besides myoclonin1, while 6A3-mAb specifically recognized myoclonin1 and detected it only in cells with motile cilia but not in neurons. In dividing cells, mRib72-pAb signals were observed at the midbody (intercellular bridge) and mitotic spindle, but 6A3-mAb did not show any signals at these apparatuses. We further found that the complete elimination of myoclonin1 in Efhc1(-/-) mouse did not critically affect cell division and migration of neurons in cerebral cortex. These results indicate that myoclonin1 is not expressed in neurons, not a regulator of cell division or neuronal migration during cortical development, but expressed in choroid plexus and ependymal cells and suggest that EFHC1 mutation-dependent JME is a motile ciliopathy.
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