| Literature DB >> 25652408 |
Nina Dupuis1, Assia Fafouri1, Aurélien Bayot1, Manoj Kumar1, Tifenn Lecharpentier1, Gareth Ball2, David Edwards2, Véronique Bernard3, Pascal Dournaud1, Séverine Drunat4, Marie Vermelle-Andrzejewski5, Catheline Vilain6, Marc Abramowicz6, Julie Désir7, Jacky Bonaventure8, Nelly Gareil9, Gaelle Boncompain9, Zsolt Csaba1, Franck Perez9, Sandrine Passemard4, Pierre Gressens10, Vincent El Ghouzzi11.
Abstract
Dymeclin is a Golgi-associated protein whose deficiency causes Dyggve-Melchior-Clausen syndrome (DMC, MIM #223800), a rare recessively inherited spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia consistently associated with postnatal microcephaly and intellectual disability. While the skeletal phenotype of DMC patients has been extensively described, very little is known about their cerebral anomalies, which result in brain growth defects and cognitive dysfunction. We used Dymeclin-deficient mice to determine the cause of microcephaly and to identify defective mechanisms at the cellular level. Brain weight and volume were reduced in all mutant mice from postnatal day 5 onward. Mutant mice displayed a narrowing of the frontal cortex, although cortical layers were normally organized. Interestingly, the corpus callosum was markedly thinner, a characteristic we also identified in DMC patients. Consistent with this, the myelin sheath was thinner, less compact and not properly rolled, while the number of mature oligodendrocytes and their ability to produce myelin basic protein were significantly decreased. Finally, cortical neurons from mutant mice and primary fibroblasts from DMC patients displayed substantially delayed endoplasmic reticulum to Golgi trafficking, which could be fully rescued upon Dymeclin re-expression. These findings indicate that Dymeclin is crucial for proper myelination and anterograde neuronal trafficking, two processes that are highly active during postnatal brain maturation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25652408 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddv038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150