| Literature DB >> 27600654 |
Matthew Nolan1, Kevin Talbot2, Olaf Ansorge3.
Abstract
Disruptions to genes linked to RNA processing and homeostasis are implicated in the pathogenesis of two pathologically related but clinically heterogeneous neurodegenerative diseases, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Mutations in the Fused-in-Sarcoma (FUS) gene encoding a 526 amino-acid RNA-binding protein are found in a small subset of ALS cases, but FUS mutations do not appear to be a direct cause of FTD. Structural and functional similarities between FUS and another ALS-related RNA-binding protein, TDP-43, highlight the potential importance of aberrant RNA processing in ALS/FTD, and this pathway is now a major focus of interest. Recently, several research groups have reported transgenic vertebrate models of FUSopathy, with varying results. Here, we discuss the evidence for FUS pathogenicity in ALS/FTD, review the experimental approaches used and phenotypic features of FUS rodent models reported to date, and outline their contribution to our understanding of pathogenic mechanisms. Further refinement of vertebrate models will likely aid our understanding of the role of FUS in both diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; FUS; FUSopathy; Frontotemporal dementia; Frontotemporal lobar degeneration; MND; TDP-43
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27600654 PMCID: PMC5011941 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-016-0358-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Structure and functional domains of FUS. FUS is a member of the TET family of proteins, and contains several functional domains including a QGSY-rich region, multiple RNA binding regions, a C-terminal Zinc-finger motif and two putative ‘prion-like’ domains. The majority of mutations in ALS-FUS are located within the C-terminal nuclear localization signal domain in exon 15. Figure adapted by author from Vance et al. [91] and Deng et al. [21]
Phenotype-pathology correlations summary of FUS-linked human ALS/FTD
| Disease | Neuropathology | Genetics | Epidemiology | Clinical features | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALS-FUS | - Degeneration of both upper and lower motor neurons |
|
| - Progressive muscular atrophy | |
| FTLD-FUS | Atypical FTLD with Ub (aFTLD-U) | - Widespread degeneration of frontal cortex and ventral temporal lobe | Rare cases of | ~10 % FTLD cases display FUS pathology | - Normally behavioural variant FTD |
| NIFID | - Neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions containing abnormal intermediate filament accumulation | ||||
| BIBD | - Significant FUS-pathology plus subcortical basophilic inclusions on H&E staining | ||||
ALS Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (familial and sporadic), FTLD Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration, NIFID Neuronal Intermediate Filament Inclusion Disease, BIBD Basophilic Inclusion Body Disease, FUS, Fused-insarcoma; H&E, Haematoxylin and eosin
Fig. 2Neuronal and glial cytoplasmic inclusions immunoreactive for FUS define the pathology of both ALS-FUS and FTLD-FUS. Basophilic inclusions are present in neurons in ALS-FUS (arrowed) and can be viewed using H&E stain, X400 (a). Discrete neuronal inclusion immunoreactive for FUS associated with the P525L mutation, X400 (b). ALS-FUS inclusions in the anterior horn of spinal cord, both X40 Obj (c, d). Well defined, compact inclusions (c) or intense diffuse cytoplasmic staining (d) are commonly seen, often with nuclear clearance
Pathogenetic differences between ALS-FUS and FTLD-FUS
Under normal physiological conditions, FUS does not appear to undergo any post-translational modifications. Arginine methylation is facilitated by protein methyltransferase 1 (PRMT1), which inhibits binding to Transportin-1 and prevents nuclear re-localization. Hypermethylation of FUS protein only occurs in ALS-FUS, and not FTLD-FUS, suggesting possible insight into the way FUS aggregates are the predominant pathological characteristic of FTLD-FUS despite the absence of causative mutations, * = FUS is phosphorylated in response to DNA damage, some evidence of DNA damage in FTLD
Rodent models of ALS-FUS
| Study | Species | Model type | Background | Phenotype | Neuropathology | Gene expression analysis | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kino et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic knockout (FUS -/-) | Mixed C57BL/6-ICR | Hyperactivity, reduction in anxiety, lowered body weight. No reduction in motor activity or observation of ALS phenotypic features. | Non-progressive vacuolation of CA3 region at 8-10 weeks. No evidence of neurodegeneration | No significant enrichment of specific profiles or changes in expression of other ALS-FTD related genes | Underexpression of FUS mRNA |
| Robinson et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, FUS gene including R522G mutation and lacking RNA recognition motif | B6CBAF1/J | Lowered body weight, early lethality, pronounced tremor around two days before death | Large cytoplasmic FUS-positive inclusions in cortex and brainstem. No evidence of neurodegeneration | Not studied. | Significant FUS overexpression |
| Shelkovnikova et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, using human aggregate prone FUS-variant lacking Nuclear localization signal and RNA binding motif (expressed at lower levels than endogenous FUS) | Mixed C57BL/6-CBA | Severe motor dysfunction at ~3 months, death within 2 weeks of symptom onset | FUS-positive inclusions in lower motor-neuron cell bodies, some ubiquinated inclusions. Significant SC neuronal loss and neuroinflammation. Prominent muscular atrophy | Not studied. | - |
| Verbeeck et al. [ | Mouse | Somatic brain transgenic using intracerebral injection of AAV incorporating either R521C, ΔR14, or WT-overexpression | B6C3F1 | Healthy at time of death (3 months), no obvious motor impairment in any line | Increased cytoplasmic FUS expression in both mutants, however only some ΔR14 animals showed actual FUS-positive, ubiquinated inclusions. No evidence of neurodegeneration | Not studied. | High levels of FUS mutants within cytoplasm |
| Mitchell et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, over-expressing human WT FUS (hFUS +/+) | C57BL/6 | Rapid decline in motor function from 4 weeks old, hind limb paralysis at 8 weeks | Intense perinuclear and cytoplasmic FUS staining in cortical neurons without neuronal loss. Granular cytoplasmic FUS inclusions in spinal cord with neuronal loss and astrogliosis | Not studied. | Increased nuclear and cytosolic FUS levels |
| Qiu et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic expressing mutant R521C construct | C57BL/6 | Severe motor dysfunction – spastic paraplegia, muscle wasting, abnormal gait etc. Death within 6 weeks of symptom onset | Significant (~50 %) loss of motor neurons with moderate astrogliosis in the spinal cord. FUS expression mainly seen in nuclei. Dendritic and synaptic defects in both SC and cortical neurons | R521C mutation causes splicing defects in genes that regulate synaptic functions. 766 genes involved in range of cellular functions identified that are differentially expressed between mutant and WT mice | FUS-R521C–associated DNA damage causes changes in downstream |
| Sephton et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, Cre-recombinase approach. Created two lines expressing either R521G mutation or overexpressing WT FUS at low levels | C57BL/6 | Both lines showed severe motor dysfunction followed by early lethality. FUSR521G mice that escaped early lethality showed less pronounced motor dysfunction and deficits in spatial awareness | No FUS proteinopathy or aggregation in either line. No evidence of neuronal loss. Denervation of neuromuscular junctions and muscular atrophy in both lines | Pre-symptomatic FUSWT – differential expression of 185 genes, particularly related to DNA repair and regulation of cell proliferation. No statistically significant expression changes in FUSR521G mice | Reduced levels of R521C mRNA at synapses in response to mGluR activation. |
| Sharma et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, Cre-LoxP with expression of WT human FUS, R521C or P525L mutation at | C57BL/6 | Both mutant lines showed hind limb weakness (P525L more severe) with no effect on survival. No phenotype in WT line | Progressive, mutation-dependent neurodegeneration and denervation of NMJ. Large increase in cytoplasmic FUS aggregation without inclusion formation. Additional astrocytosis and microgliosis in mutant SC but not WT | Not studied. | Additional KO model demonstrates loss of FUS alone not responsible for motor phenotype |
| Scekic‐Zahirovic et al. [ | Mouse | Transgenic, knock-in mice using ablation of NLS (exon 15), and knock-out (-/-) mice lines | C57BL/6 | Immediate perinatal lethality of both lines from respiratory insufficiency | Cytoplasmic FUS mislocalization in transgenic line without inclusion or stress-granule formation. Knock-in line showed reduced motor neuron numbers associated with neuronal apoptosis. FUS mislocalization affected HDAC1 aggregation | 353 genes differentially expressed by both lines in the same direction compared to wild-type. Both lines showed significant splicing alterations | Cross with specific Cre-line rescued FUS mislocalization but not perinatal lethality phenotype. |
| Huang et al. [ | Rat | Transgenic expressing mutant FUS R521C construct. Additional model overexpressing human WT FUS | Sprague Dawley | Progressive paralysis of both fore and hind limbs in R521C mutant model but not in human WT overexpressing model. Spatial awareness and memory deficits in mutant line | Ubiquitinated, diffuse cytoplasmic FUS expression and glial activation in mutant FUS model but not WT model. Hippocampal and cortical neuron loss in both models | Not studied. | - |
Despite several models utilising the same R521C mutation and transgenic approach, results notably vary. Two knock-out models created before the identification of the significance of FUS in ALS are not included for clarity
AAV Adeno-associated virus, WT Wild-type, SC Spinal cord, FUS Fused-in-sarcoma, MAPT Microtubule-associated protein tau
aModel publicly available through Jackson Laboratories as of June 2016