1. Academic Validation
  2. Nuclear accumulation of truncated atrophin-1 fragments in a transgenic mouse model of DRPLA

Nuclear accumulation of truncated atrophin-1 fragments in a transgenic mouse model of DRPLA

  • Neuron. 1999 Sep;24(1):275-86. doi: 10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80839-9.
G Schilling 1 J D Wood K Duan H H Slunt V Gonzales M Yamada J K Cooper R L Margolis N A Jenkins N G Copeland H Takahashi S Tsuji D L Price D R Borchelt C A Ross
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Abstract

Dentatorubral and pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) is a member of a family of progressive neurodegenerative diseases caused by polyglutamine repeat expansion. Transgenic mice expressing full-length human atrophin-1 with 65 consecutive glutamines exhibit ataxia, tremors, abnormal movements, seizures, and premature death. These mice accumulate atrophin-1 immunoreactivity and inclusion bodies in the nuclei of multiple populations of neurons. Subcellular fractionation revealed 120 kDa nuclear fragments of mutant atrophin-1, whose abundance increased with age and phenotypic severity. Brains of DRPLA patients contained apparently identical 120 kDa nuclear fragments. By contrast, mice overexpressing atrophin-1 with 26 glutamines were phenotypically normal and did not accumulate the 120 kDa fragments. We conclude that the evolution of neuropathology in DRPLA involves proteolytic processing of mutant atrophin-1 and nuclear accumulation of truncated fragments.

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