4.6 Article

In vivo 5-ethynyluridine (EU) labelling detects reduced transcription in Purkinje cell degeneration mouse mutants, but can itself induce neurodegeneration

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01200-y

Keywords

Purkinje cell degeneration; 5-Ethynylurdine; Nascent RNA; Transcription stress; DNA damage; Ercc1; SCA1

Categories

Funding

  1. ZonMW Memorabel [733050810]
  2. NWO Building Blocks of Life
  3. Oncode (Dutch Cancer Institute)
  4. EJP-RD [TC-NER RD20-113]
  5. ERC Advanced Grant DamAge
  6. ERC Advanced Grant Dam2Age
  7. NIH [PO1 AG017242]
  8. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 829]
  9. NWO-Veni

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The use of EU labelling in mouse models of nervous system disorders enables visualization of transcriptional changes in different cell types, with potential introduction of non-physiological properties in labelled RNAs. Additionally, EU incorporation in highly transcriptionally-active neurons shows neurotoxic effects, suggesting implications for studying transcriptional alterations in disease models.
Fluorescent staining of newly transcribed RNA via metabolic labelling with 5-ethynyluridine (EU) and click chemistry enables visualisation of changes in transcription, such as in conditions of cellular stress. Here, we tested whether EU labelling can be used to examine transcription in vivo in mouse models of nervous system disorders. We show that injection of EU directly into the cerebellum results in reproducible labelling of newly transcribed RNA in cerebellar neurons and glia, with cell type-specific differences in relative labelling intensities, such as Purkinje cells exhibiting the highest levels. We also observed EU-labelling accumulating into cytoplasmic inclusions, indicating that EU, like other modified uridines, may introduce non-physiological properties in labelled RNAs. Additionally, we found that EU induces Purkinje cell degeneration nine days after EU injection, suggesting that EU incorporation not only results in abnormal RNA transcripts, but also eventually becomes neurotoxic in highly transcriptionally-active neurons. However, short post-injection intervals of EU labelling in both a Purkinje cell-specific DNA repair-deficient mouse model and a mouse model of spinocerebellar ataxia 1 revealed reduced transcription in Purkinje cells compared to controls. We combined EU labelling with immunohistology to correlate altered EU staining with pathological markers, such as genotoxic signalling factors. These data indicate that the EU-labelling method provided here can be used to identify changes in transcription in vivo in nervous system disease models.

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