4.5 Article

Mutant HSPB8 causes motor neuron-specific neurite degeneration

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 19, Issue 16, Pages 3254-3265

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddq234

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Antwerp
  2. University of Leuven
  3. Fund for Scientific Research (FWO-Flanders)
  4. American Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA)
  5. Medical Foundation Queen Elisabeth (GSKE)
  6. Association Belge contre les Maladies Neuromusculaires (ABMM)
  7. Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO) [P6/43]
  8. Interfaculty Council for Development Co-operation of the University of Leuven
  9. FWO-Flanders, Belgium
  10. E. von Behring Chair for Neuromuscular and Neurodegenerative Disorders
  11. GSKE

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Missense mutations (K141N and K141E) in the alpha-crystallin domain of the small heat shock protein HSPB8 (HSP22) cause distal hereditary motor neuropathy (distal HMN) or Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy type 2L (CMT2L). The mechanism through which mutant HSPB8 leads to a specific motor neuron disease phenotype is currently unknown. To address this question, we compared the effect of mutant HSPB8 in primary neuronal and glial cell cultures. In motor neurons, expression of both HSPB8 K141N and K141E mutations clearly resulted in neurite degeneration, as manifested by a reduction in number of neurites per cell, as well as in a reduction in average length of the neurites. Furthermore, expression of the K141E (and to a lesser extent, K141N) mutation also induced spheroids in the neurites. We did not detect any signs of apoptosis in motor neurons, showing that mutant HSPB8 resulted in neurite degeneration without inducing neuronal death. While overt in motor neurons, these phenotypes were only very mildly present in sensory neurons and completely absent in cortical neurons. Also glial cells did not show an altered phenotype upon expression of mutant HSPB8. These findings show that despite the ubiquitous presence of HSPB8, only motor neurons appear to be affected by the K141N and K141E mutations which explain the predominant motor neuron phenotype in distal HMN and CMT2L.

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