Somatic and intergenerational G4C2 hexanucleotide repeat instability in a human C9orf72 knock-in mouse model

Author:

Kojak Nada1,Kuno Junko1,Fittipaldi Kristina E1,Khan Ambereen1,Wenger David1,Glasser Michael1,Donnianni Roberto A1,Tang Yajun1,Zhang Jade1,Huling Katie1,Ally Roxanne1,Mujica Alejandro O1,Turner Terrence1,Magardino Gina1,Huang Pei Yi1,Kerk Sze Yen1,Droguett Gustavo1,Prissette Marine1,Rojas Jose1,Gomez Teodoro1,Gagliardi Anthony1,Hunt Charleen1,Rabinowitz Jeremy S1,Gong Guochun1,Poueymirou William1,Chiao Eric1,Zambrowicz Brian1,Siao Chia-Jen1,Kajimura Daisuke1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals , Tarrytown , NY  10591 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Expansion of a G4C2 repeat in the C9orf72 gene is associated with familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD). To investigate the underlying mechanisms of repeat instability, which occurs both somatically and intergenerationally, we created a novel mouse model of familial ALS/FTD that harbors 96 copies of G4C2 repeats at a humanized C9orf72 locus. In mouse embryonic stem cells, we observed two modes of repeat expansion. First, we noted minor increases in repeat length per expansion event, which was dependent on a mismatch repair pathway protein Msh2. Second, we found major increases in repeat length per event when a DNA double- or single-strand break (DSB/SSB) was artificially introduced proximal to the repeats, and which was dependent on the homology-directed repair (HDR) pathway. In mice, the first mode primarily drove somatic repeat expansion. Major changes in repeat length, including expansion, were observed when SSB was introduced in one-cell embryos, or intergenerationally without DSB/SSB introduction if G4C2 repeats exceeded 400 copies, although spontaneous HDR-mediated expansion has yet to be identified. These findings provide a novel strategy to model repeat expansion in a non-human genome and offer insights into the mechanism behind C9orf72 G4C2 repeat instability.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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