4.8 Article

Cross-species genetic screens identify transglutaminase 5 as a regulator of polyglutamine- expanded ataxin-1

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 132, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI156616

Keywords

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Funding

  1. RNA Profiling Core at BCM [5P30 AG053760]
  2. NIH/NIA [NIH/NINDS R37NS027699]
  3. NIH/NIGMS [R01AG057339, R01-NS045667-17]
  4. Darrell K Royal Research Fund for Alzheimer's Disease [R01GM120033, R21NS096395]
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  6. JPB Foundation [MR-2020-2156]
  7. IDDRC at Baylor College of Medicine
  8. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development

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The study identified TG5 as a regulator of mutant ATXN1, modulating its stability and oligomerization by cross-linking ATXN1 in a polyQ-length-dependent manner. Disrupting TG in Drosophila models can regulate the toxicity of mutant ATXN1, with TG5 enriched in the nuclei of SCA1-affected neurons.
Many neurodegenerative disorders are caused by abnormal accumulation of misfolded proteins. In spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1), accumulation of polyglutamine-expanded (polyQ-expanded) ataxin-1 (ATXN1) causes neuronal toxicity. Lowering total ATXN1, especially the polyQ-expanded form, alleviates disease phenotypes in mice, but the molecular mechanism by which the mutant ATXN1 is specifically modulated is not understood. Here, we identified 22 mutant ATXN1 regulators by performing a cross-species screen of 7787 and 2144 genes in human cells and Drosophila eyes, respectively. Among them, transglutaminase 5 (TG5) preferentially regulated mutant ATXN1 over the WT protein. TG enzymes catalyzed cross-linking of ATXN1 in a polyQ-length???dependent manner, thereby preferentially modulating mutant ATXN1 stability and oligomerization. Perturbing Tg in Drosophila SCA1 models modulated mutant ATXN1 toxicity. Moreover, TG5 was enriched in the nuclei of SCA1affected neurons and colocalized with nuclear ATXN1 inclusions in brain tissue from patients with SCA1. Our work provides a molecular insight into SCA1 pathogenesis and an opportunity for allele-specific targeting for neurodegenerative disorders.

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