4.7 Article

A cross-species approach using an in vivo evaluation platform in mice demonstrates that sequence variation in human RABEP2 modulates ischemic stroke outcomes

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 109, Issue 10, Pages 1814-1827

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2022.09.003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [5R01NS100866]
  2. Foundation Leducq Transatlantic Network Of Excellence in Neurovascular Disease [17 CVD 03]
  3. American Heart Association Career Development Award [938553]

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This study establishes an in vivo evaluation platform in mice and verifies that human RABEP2 can rescue the volume and collateral vessel phenotypes of mice with ischemic stroke. Additionally, it identifies damaging coding variants that affect the function of RABEP2, expanding the potential targets for ischemic stroke therapeutics development.
Ischemic stroke, caused by vessel blockage, results in cerebral infarction, the death of brain tissue. Previously, quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping of cerebral infarct volume and collateral vessel number identified a single, strong genetic locus regulating both phenotypes. Additional studies identified RAB GTPase-binding effector protein 2 (Rabep2) as the casual gene. However, there is yet no evidence that variation in the human ortholog of this gene plays any role in ischemic stroke outcomes. We established an in vivo evaluation platform in mice by using adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene replacement and verified that both mouse and human RABEP2 rescue the mouse Rabep2 knockout ischemic stroke volume and collateral vessel phenotypes. Importantly, this cross-species complementation enabled us to experimentally investigate the functional effects of coding sequence variation in human RABEP2. We chose four coding variants from the human population that are predicted by multiple in silico algorithms to be damaging to RABEP2 function. In vitro and in vivo analyses verify that all four led to decreased collateral vessel connections and increased infarct volume. Thus, there are naturally occurring loss-of-function alleles. This cross-species approach will expand the number of targets for therapeutics development for ischemic stroke.

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