4.7 Article

ZCCHC8, the nuclear exosome targeting component, is mutated in familial pulmonary fibrosis and is required for telomerase RNA maturation

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 33, Issue 19-20, Pages 1381-1396

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.326785.119

Keywords

lung disease; ciliopathy; nuclear RNA exosome; RNA processing; telomerase RNA

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1CA225027, RO1HL119476]
  2. Maryland Cigarette Restitution Fund
  3. Commonwealth Foundation
  4. Gary Williams Foundation
  5. S&R Foundation Kuno Award
  6. Turock Scholars Fund
  7. National Science Foundation [ABI-1356078]
  8. Mouse Transgenic Core at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  9. Genetic Center Resource Facility at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  10. Cell Center team at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  11. Phenotyping Core at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  12. Computational Biology Core at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  13. Oncology Tissue Services Core at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  14. Center for Infection and Inflammation Imaging Research at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  15. [T32GM007309]
  16. [T32HL007534]
  17. [F32HL142207]
  18. [P30CA006973]

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Short telomere syndromes manifest as familial idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; they are the most common premature aging disorders. We used genome-wide linkage to identify heterozygous loss of function of ZCCHC8, a zinc-knuckle containing protein, as a cause of autosomal dominant pulmonary fibrosis. ZCCHC8 associated with TR and was required for telomerase function. In ZCCHC8 knockout cells and in mutation carriers, genomically extended telomerase RNA (TR) accumulated at the expense of mature TR, consistent with a role for ZCCHC8 in mediating TR 3' end targeting to the nuclear RNA exosome. We generated Zcchc8-null mice and found that heterozygotes, similar to human mutation carriers, had TR insufficiency but an otherwise preserved transcriptome. In contrast, Zcchc8(-/-) mice developed progressive and fatal neurodevelopmental pathology with features of a ciliopathy. The Zcchc8(-/-) brain transcriptome was highly dysregulated, showing accumulation and 3' end misprocessing of other low-abundance RNAs, including those encoding cilia components as well as the intronless replication-dependent histones. Our data identify a novel cause of human short telomere syndromes-familial pulmonary fibrosis and uncover nuclear exosome targeting as an essential 3' end maturation mechanism that vertebrate TR shares with replication-dependent histones.

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