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Publication : Dosage sensitivity to Pumilio1 variants in the mouse brain reflects distinct molecular mechanisms.

First Author  Botta S Year  2023
Journal  EMBO J Volume  42
Issue  11 Pages  e112721
PubMed ID  37070548 Mgi Jnum  J:336419
Mgi Id  MGI:7487903 Doi  10.15252/embj.2022112721
Citation  Botta S, et al. (2023) Dosage sensitivity to Pumilio1 variants in the mouse brain reflects distinct molecular mechanisms. EMBO J 42(11):e112721
abstractText  Different mutations in the RNA-binding protein Pumilio1 (PUM1) cause divergent phenotypes whose severity tracks with dosage: a mutation that reduces PUM1 levels by 25% causes late-onset ataxia, whereas haploinsufficiency causes developmental delay and seizures. Yet PUM1 targets are derepressed to equal degrees in both cases, and the more severe mutation does not hinder PUM1's RNA-binding ability. We therefore considered the possibility that the severe mutation might disrupt PUM1 interactions, and identified PUM1 interactors in the murine brain. We find that mild PUM1 loss derepresses PUM1-specific targets, but the severe mutation disrupts interactions with several RNA-binding proteins and the regulation of their targets. In patient-derived cell lines, restoring PUM1 levels restores these interactors and their targets to normal levels. Our results demonstrate that dosage sensitivity does not always signify a linear relationship with protein abundance but can involve distinct mechanisms. We propose that to understand the functions of RNA-binding proteins in a physiological context will require studying their interactions as well as their targets.
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