Genetic model of UBA5 deficiency highlights the involvement of both peripheral and central nervous systems and identifies widespread mitochondrial abnormalities

Author:

Serrano Rita J1ORCID,Oorschot Viola2ORCID,Palipana Dashika1ORCID,Calcinotto Vanessa1ORCID,Sonntag Carmen1ORCID,Ramm Georg23ORCID,Bryson-Richardson Robert J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University , Melbourne 3800 , Australia

2. Monash Ramaciotti Centre for Cryo-Electron Microscopy, Monash University , Melbourne 3800 , Australia

3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Monash University , Melbourne 3800 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Variants in UBA5 have been reported to cause neurological disease with impaired motor function, developmental delay, intellectual disability and brain pathology as recurrent clinical manifestations. UBA5 encodes a ubiquitin-activating-like enzyme that activates ufmylation, a post-translational ubiquitin-like modification pathway, which has been implicated in neurodevelopment and neuronal survival. The reason behind the variation in severity and clinical manifestations in affected individuals and the signal transduction pathways regulated by ufmylation that compromise the nervous system remains unknown. Zebrafish have emerged as a powerful model to study neurodegenerative disease due to its amenability for in vivo analysis of muscle and neuronal tissues, high-throughput examination of motor function and rapid embryonic development allowing an examination of disease progression. Using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-associated protein 9 genome editing, we developed and characterized zebrafish mutant models to investigate disease pathophysiology. uba5 mutant zebrafish showed a significantly impaired motor function accompanied by delayed growth and reduced lifespan, reproducing key phenotypes observed in affected individuals. Our study demonstrates the suitability of zebrafish to study the pathophysiology of UBA5-related disease and as a powerful tool to identify pathways that could reduce disease progression. Furthermore, uba5 mutants exhibited widespread mitochondrial damage in both the nervous system and the skeletal muscle, suggesting that a perturbation of mitochondrial function may contribute to disease pathology.

Funder

Monash Graduate Scholarship

MGS

Monash International Postgraduate Research Scholarship

MIPRS

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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