| Literature DB >> 24035135 |
Giampietro Schiavo1, Linda Greensmith, Majid Hafezparast, Elizabeth M C Fisher.
Abstract
Cytoplasmic dynein is the main retrograde motor in all eukaryotic cells. This complex comprises different subunits assembled on a cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain 1 (DYNC1H1) dimer. Cytoplasmic dynein is particularly important for neurons because it carries essential signals and organelles from distal sites to the cell body. In the past decade, several mouse models have helped to dissect the numerous functions of DYNC1H1. Additionally, several DYNC1H1 mutations have recently been found in human patients that give rise to a broad spectrum of developmental and midlife-onset disorders. Here, we discuss the effects of mutations of mouse and human DYNC1H1 and how these studies are giving us new insight into the many critical roles DYNC1H1 plays in the nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: Cramping 1; Legs at odd angles; Sprawling; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; axonal transport; motor neurons; neurodegeneration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24035135 PMCID: PMC3824068 DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2013.08.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Neurosci ISSN: 0166-2236 Impact factor: 13.837
Figure 1The cytoplasmic dynein complex. (A) Diagram of the cytoplasmic dynein motor complex including the heavy chain (HC) dimer and its associated subunits. A model of the motor domain [5] built from yeast cytoplasmic dynein (PDB ID 4AKG) and the mouse microtubule-binding domain (MTBD) (PDB ID 3ERR) assembled by Dr A.P. Carter has been overlapped with the schematic of the dynein HC in its apo or post-power stroke form [5,93,94]. Adapted, with permission, from The Company of Biologists (J. Cell Sci. 126, 705–713; [4]). The electron micrograph of an isolated molecule of monomeric dynein from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagella in its pre-power stroke form is shown for comparison on the right. Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers (Nature 421, 715–718; [93]). Conformational changes driven by ATP hydrolysis in the motor domain, which alter the relative position of the stem and the tail/linker, are hypothesised to lead to the power stroke and progression on microtubules [5,94]. The HCs (in dark violet) contain the six AAA ATPase domains (in red), the stalk region, which includes the MTBD (in dark yellow and yellow, respectively), the buttress (in orange), and the linker region. HCs are associated with light intermediate chains (LICs) (in green), intermediate chains (ICs) (in cyan), and light chains (LCs) (in light yellow). (B) Domain composition of the cytoplasmic dynein HC. In addition to the functional domains shown in (A), this scheme displays the homodimerisation region and linker (in white). The positions on the dynein HC of the three mouse mutations (Loa, Legs at odd angles; Cra, Cramping 1; Swl, Sprawling; bottom) and the human mutations discussed in this review (top) are indicated.
Cytoplasmic dynein-interacting proteinsa
| Protein | Type of binding | Site/subunit | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| LIS1 | Direct | DYNC1H1 (AAA3/AAA4 junction) | |
| NudE | Indirect | Intermediate chain | |
| Dynactin | Indirect | Intermediate chain | |
| Snapin | Indirect | Intermediate chain | |
| Htt | Indirect | Intermediate chain | |
| HAP1 | Indirect | Dynactin | |
| BICD1 | Indirect | Dynactin |
The table shows some of the interactors with the cytoplasmic dynein motor complex involved in CNS development and homeostasis.
Mouse mutations in the cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain gene
| Approved allele name | Allele | Phenotype of heterozygotes | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knockout, created by gene targeting of the first exon. | Heterozygotes reported normal. Nulls die by embryonic day (E)8.5 with Golgi and other abnormalities. | ||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change F580Y in homodimerisation and dynein intermediate chain-binding site; created by chemical mutagenesis. | Motor, sensory, and other abnormalities. Loss of 50% motor neurons in E18.5 embryos. By 13 weeks, muscle spindles are reduced by 86% in hind limbs. Homozygotes dead by 1 day after birth. | ||
| 9-bp deletion resulting in loss of three amino acids from 1040–1043 (GIVT to A); created by radiation mutagenesis. | Sensory early-onset neuropathy, with reduction of 88% of muscle spindles in hind-limb muscles compared with wild type. Homozygotes die | ||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change Y1055C in homodimerisation domain, created by chemical mutagenesis. | Motor, sensory, and other abnormalities. Loss of 20% of motor neurons in E18.5 embryos. |
Human mutations in the cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain gene
| Approved allele name | Allele | Phenotype of heterozygotes | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normocephaly. Pathological thick convolutions of the posterior cerebral cortex (posterior pachygyria) and severe intellectual disability. Late-onset epilepsy. | |||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change H306R in homodimerisation domain. | Early-onset, slowly progressive distal lower-limb weakness and wasting (similar to CMT2 neuropathy) or SMA with lower-extremity predominance. Learning difficulties in some individuals. | ||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change I584L in homodimerisation and dynein intermediate chain-binding site. | SMA with lower-extremity predominance. Normal upper-extremity strength. | ||
| Microcephaly associated with posterior pachygyria. Early-onset epilepsy and spastic tetraplegia. | |||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change K671E in homodimerisation and dynein intermediate chain-binding site. | Early-onset, slowly progressive distal lower-limb weakness and wasting. May have a ‘waddling’ gait. No known sensory involvement. | ||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change Y970C in homodimerisation domain. | Significant motor delay, no known sensory involvement, mild cognitive impairment. | ||
| Severe mental retardation, unable to walk or talk, hypertonia and club feet; untested reflexes. Epilepsy. Cortical malformation. Lack of sensory data. | |||
| Normocephaly. Excessive number of small convolutions of the frontal cortex (frontal polymicrogyria) and severe intellectual disability. Foot deformities. | |||
| Normocephaly. Posterior pachygyria with severe intellectual disability and awkwardness. Transient focal epilepsy at early age. | |||
| Familial point mutation resulting in missense change K3241T in the stalk domain. | Normocephaly. Posterior pachygyria with mild or absent intellectual disability and variable awkwardness. Focal epilepsy. | ||
| Microcephaly associated with posterior pachygyria, frontal polymicrogyria, and other CNS malformations. Early-onset epilepsy. Spastic tetraplegia with foot deformities. | |||
| Point mutation resulting in missense change R3344Q in the stalk domain (MTBD). This | Mild microcephaly associated with posterior pachygyria with moderate intellectual disability and awkwardness. Focal epilepsy. | ||
| Microcephaly associated with posterior pachygyria, frontal polymicrogyria and other CNS malformations. Early-onset epilepsy. Spastic tetraplegia with foot deformities. | |||
| Hypotonia, moderately severe mental retardation, broad-based, waddling gait, reduced reflexes. Bilateral deficient gyration of the frontal lobes. Lack of sensory data. |
Figure 2Quantitative analysis of axonal retrograde transport by intravital microscopy. (A) Axonal retrograde transport of signalling endosomes containing a fluorescently labelled atoxic fragment of tetanus neurotoxin was monitored in single axons in the intact sciatic nerve by time-lapse confocal microscopy and shown as a time series [44]. (B) The deficit in axonal retrograde transport observed in early symptomatic SOD1 transgenic mice (74 ± 1.7 days; in red) is almost completely rescued by the Dync1h1 allele in Dync1h1SOD1 double-mutant mice (in blue). The speed distribution profile displayed by Dync1h1SOD1 mice overlaps with that observed in Dync1h1 animals (in green) and is slightly shifted towards lower speed values compared with wild type mice (in black) of similar age.
Genetic interactions between SOD1 and the cytoplasmic dynein complexa
| SOD1-ALS mutant mouse parent | Effect on lifespan of double mutants compared with SOD1-ALS littermates (time to humane end point shown for SOD1-ALS double mutants compared with their SOD1-ALS littermates) | Refs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 28% significant increase in lifespan (160 days, | |||
| 21% significant increase in lifespan (156 days, | |||
| 9% significant increase in lifespan (165 days, | |||
| 14% significant increase in lifespan (167 days, compared with 147 days, | |||
| No significant differences in lifespan (124 days double mutants, | |||
| 14% increase in lifespan (271 days, | |||
| No significant differences in lifespan (192 days, | |||
| 6% increase in lifespan (386 days, |
Effects on lifespan (to humane end point) of double-mutant progeny from crossing SOD1-ALS mutant mice to animals with mutations in Dync1h1 or other strains discussed in this review.