| Literature DB >> 27884167 |
Friederike Ehrhart1,2, Susan L M Coort3, Elisa Cirillo3, Eric Smeets4, Chris T Evelo4,3, Leopold M G Curfs4.
Abstract
Rett syndrome (RTT) is a rare disease but still one of the most abundant causes for intellectual disability in females. Typical symptoms are onset at month 6-18 after normal pre- and postnatal development, loss of acquired skills and severe intellectual disability. The type and severity of symptoms are individually highly different. A single mutation in one gene, coding for methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MECP2), is responsible for the disease. The most important action of MECP2 is regulating epigenetic imprinting and chromatin condensation, but MECP2 influences many different biological pathways on multiple levels although the molecular pathways from gene to phenotype are currently not fully understood. In this review the known changes in metabolite levels, gene expression and biological pathways in RTT are summarized, discussed how they are leading to some characteristic RTT phenotypes and therefore the gaps of knowledge are identified. Namely, which phenotypes have currently no mechanistic explanation leading back to MECP2 related pathways? As a result of this review the visualization of the biologic pathways showing MECP2 up- and downstream regulation was developed and published on WikiPathways which will serve as template for future omics data driven research. This pathway driven approach may serve as a use case for other rare diseases, too.Entities:
Keywords: Bioinformatics; DNA methylation; Data integration; Epigenetics; MECP2; Rett syndrome; Systems biology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27884167 PMCID: PMC5123333 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0545-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1MECP2 gene and protein. MECP2 is located on the X chromosome (X:154021573–154137103) on the reverse strand (ensembl, human genome built 8.2). MECP2 gene is about 10505 bp long and has 4 exons which can be spliced to two protein-coding variants e1 and e2. The protein has 498 (486) amino acids and consists of 6 distinct domains whereas the methyl-DNA binding (MDB) and the transcriptional repression domain (TRD) are the most important for function. Mutation positions are marked with red arrows according to Lyst et al. 2013 [57]. Solid red arrows indicate position of mutations of MECP2, which are present in Rett females but not in their parents. Those are found mostly in MDB and the C-terminal end of TRD. Empty red arrows indicate MECP2 mutations, which do not lead to Rett syndrome. The major phorphorylation sites (S80 and S241) are marked in black [118]
Regulation of MECP2 expression by transcription factors and microRNA
| Type | Transcription factors/microRNA |
|---|---|
| Transcription factors targeting MECP2 cis-elements [ | Activation by BRN3, MYT1, SP1, SP3, C/EBP, CTCF, E2F1, TAF1, TAP1 |
| Repression by REST, BRN2, BCL6, | |
| Trans-regulatory elements of | Activation by HNRNPF |
| Repression by HNRNPH1 | |
| miRNA (posttranscriptional repression) [ | hsa-miR-483- 5p, hsa-miR-132-5p, hsa-miR-152-3p, hsa-miR-199a-3p, hsa-miR-30a-3p, and hsa-miR-130b-3p |
Fig. 2MECP2 pathway from WikiPathways (wikipathways.org/instance/WP3584). Visualization of MECP2 is regulated by several upstream elements, e.g. promotor elements and microRNAs, and MECP2 regulating the expression and splicing of several downstream transcripts, proteins and miRNAs
Fig. 3MECP2 and its different levels of influence to chromatin structure, DNA binding, protein and metabolite level leading to clinical phenotypes. 5MeCyt = methylated cytosine, 5OHMeCyt = hydroxylated cytosine
Fig. 4Pathway of cytosine methylation. 5MeCyt is converted to 5OHMeCyt and further to 5-formylcytosine and 5-carboxycytosine by the TET1-3 complex. MECP2 binding to these sites prevents them from being converted. The biological process is available at wikipathways.org/instance/WP3585
Metabolites in RTT
| Changes in RTT | Metabolites |
|---|---|
| Increased levels [ | Catabolites of catecholamine metabolism, glutamate |
| Decreased levels [ | Dopamine, norepinephrine (noradrenaline), serotonin, melatonin, myo-inositol, phospholipids, GABA |
Genes, which are up- or downregulated in human or model system without functional MECP2
| Changes in RTT | Genes |
|---|---|
| Upregulated [ |
|
| Downregulated [ |
|
Olfactory vs. visual system: tissue specific MECP2 influence
| Olfactory epithelium | Visual system |
|---|---|
| Observation: A study on olfactory bulb biopsies of RTT females revealed less olfactory receptors indicating less sensitive olfactory sense [ | Observation: Vertebrate eyes are originally specialized brain tissue. Though being expected to be subjected to MECP2 dysfunctionality symptoms the visual system, retina, visual nerve and visual cortex seem to be less affected by RTT. Patients are able to focus, blink, eye-track, and do not perform worse in visual tests than healthy population [ |
| Molecular/histological data: MECP2 deficiency induces also an imbalance in glutamatergic/GABAergic innervation in the olfactory bulb. The excitation in MECP2 KO mice is reduced and there is generally an imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory pathways observed leading to premature death of olfactory neurons in RTT mice models [ | Molecular/histological data: Jain et al. investigated ocular MECP2 expression in post mortem brains of RTT females and compared it to healthy controls. Although the RTT females show the typical severe neurological deficits their visual functions are well preserved. There were no gross or microscopic aberrations detected and no significant MECP2 level differences [ |
| Conclusion: Data indicates that the olfactory sense is less functional in Rett females due to the strong dependency of the molecular signal processing pathways on MECP2. | Conclusion: Together with the measured visual performance in human RTT females [ |
| Gap: Why is the olfactory sensory system affected in RTT females? Is there a measurable difference in response to olfactory stimulants of Rett females and controls? | Gap: What is the mechanistic explanation of the rather unaffected visual system? Why do neuronal cells of the visual system not need MECP2 for proper function? |