Pathogenesis underlying hexanucleotide repeat expansions in C9orf72 gene in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Author:

Chong Zhao Zhong1,Menkes Daniel L.2,Souayah Nizar3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology , Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School , 185 S. Orange Ave , Newark , NJ 07103 , USA

2. Department of Neurology , Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine , 3555 West 13 Mile Road, Suite N120 , Royal Oak , MI 48073 , USA

3. Department of Neurology , Rutgers University, New Jersey Medical School , 90 Bergen Street DOC 8100 , Newark , NJ 07101 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rapidly progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disorder. Mutations in C9orf72 and the resulting hexanucleotide repeat (GGGGCC) expansion (HRE) has been identified as a major cause of familial ALS, accounting for about 40 % of familial and 6 % of sporadic cases of ALS in Western patients. The pathological outcomes of HRE expansion in ALS have been recognized as the results of two mechanisms that include both the toxic gain-of-function and loss-of-function of C9ORF72. The gain of toxicity results from RNA and dipeptide repeats (DPRs). The HRE can be bidirectionally transcribed into RNA foci, which can bind to and disrupt RNA splicing, transport, and translation. The DPRs that include poly-glycine-alanine, poly-glycine-proline, poly-glycine- arginine, poly-proline-alanine, and poly-proline-arginine can induce toxicity by direct binding and sequestrating other proteins to interfere rRNA synthesis, ribosome biogenesis, translation, and nucleocytoplasmic transport. The C9ORF72 functions through binding to its partners-Smith-Magenis chromosome regions 8 (SMCR8) and WD repeat-containing protein (WDR41). Loss of C9ORF72 function results in impairment of autophagy, deregulation of autoimmunity, increased stress, and disruption of nucleocytoplasmic transport. Further insight into the mechanism in C9ORF72 HRE pathogenesis will facilitate identifying novel and effective therapeutic targets for ALS.

Funder

RAM Capital II

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Neuroscience

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