| Literature DB >> 31608123 |
Malin Kvarnung1,2, Mansoureh Shahsavani2,3, Fulya Taylan2, Mohsen Moslem3, Nicole Breeuwsma3, Loora Laan4, Jens Schuster4, Zhe Jin5, Daniel Nilsson1,2, Agne Lieden1,2, Britt-Marie Anderlid1,2, Magnus Nordenskjöld1,2, Elisabeth Syk Lundberg1,2, Bryndis Birnir5, Niklas Dahl4, Ann Nordgren1,2, Anna Lindstrand1,2, Anna Falk3.
Abstract
The etiology of hereditary ataxia syndromes is heterogeneous, and the mechanisms underlying these disorders are often unknown. Here, we utilized exome sequencing in two siblings with progressive ataxia and muscular weakness and identified a novel homozygous splice mutation (c.3020-1G > A) in neurofascin (NFASC). In RNA extracted from fibroblasts, we showed that the mutation resulted in inframe skipping of exon 26, with a deprived expression of the full-length transcript that corresponds to NFASC isoform NF186. To further investigate the disease mechanisms, we reprogrammed fibroblasts from one affected sibling to induced pluripotent stem cells, directed them to neuroepithelial stem cells and finally differentiated to neurons. In early neurogenesis, differentiating cells with selective depletion of the NF186 isoform showed significantly reduced neurite outgrowth as well as fewer emerging neurites. Furthermore, whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of patient-derived neuronal cells revealed a lower threshold for openings, indicating altered Na+ channel kinetics, suggesting a lower threshold for openings as compared to neuronal cells without the NFASC mutation. Taken together, our results suggest that loss of the full-length NFASC isoform NF186 causes perturbed neurogenesis and impaired neuronal biophysical properties resulting in a novel early-onset autosomal recessive ataxia syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: ataxia; neurites; neuroepithelial stem cells; neurofascin; neuronal isoform NF186; patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells
Year: 2019 PMID: 31608123 PMCID: PMC6769111 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Figure 1Clinical and molecular features of the patients with homozygous NFASC mutations at the splice acceptor of intron 25. The mutation leads to skipping of exon 26 in transcript NM_001005388.2 which encodes for NF186. (A) Pedigree of the family. The two affected individuals with a homozygous c.3020-1G > A mutation in NFASC are marked with filled symbols. The two unaffected siblings, of whom one has passed away from a severe infection, as well as the healthy parents are marked with dots indicating heterozygous carrier status. Carrier status of family members was identified using both ES and Sanger sequencing. (B) Facial photographs of the two affected individuals showing no dysmorphology. (C) Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in both patients. T2-weighted scans show in the sister (III:1) mild atrophy of the cerebellar vermis as indicated by arrows on axonal as well as sagittal images. Normal findings were seen in the brother (III:4). (D) Schematic representation of NFASC exons and RefGene transcript isoforms are shown. Transcript structures are adapted from ProteinPainter application of St. Jude PeCan Data Portal (https://pecan.stjude.cloud/proteinpaint). Black arrow shows the location of the mutation at the splice acceptor site of intron 25 according to transcript NM_001005388.2. Green and red arrows represent forward and reverse primers for reverse transcription PCR and quantitative PCR, respectively. (E) Reverse transcription followed by PCR amplification of region between exons 25 and 27 shows a single short fragment (241 bp) in the affected individual compared to the fragment (358 bp) obtained from RNA sample extracted from control fibroblasts C2. The carrier parents have both short and long fragments. RNA extracted from EBV transformed blood cells C1 does not show any NFASC expression. NTC, no template control (F) Sanger sequencing of short fragments confirms skipping of exon 26. (G) mRNA isolated from fibroblasts that are obtained from skin biopsies of the patient III:4, parents and two controls were used for RT-qPCR. Expression of exon 26 containing transcript isoform NF186 is not detected in patient III:4. The expression level of this isoform in the parents is half compared to the mean expression level of controls when the expression levels normalized to against total NFASC isoforms. Significance is indicated as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005.
Figure 2Neural stem cell (NESC) characterization and differentiation. (A) Schematic diagram of our in vitro model from somatic cells to neurons. (B) Bright-field images of iPSC-derived NESCs from control and patient (III:4) in monolayer culture. NESCs self-organized into neural rosette structures. (C) Immunofluorescent staining of iPSC-derived NESCs. All derived NESC lines expressed neural stem cell markers NESTIN, PAX6, (D) SOX2, DACH1, (E) ZO-1, and (F) proliferation marker KI67. Nuclei stained with DAPI, scale bar: 50 µm. (G) Bright-field images of 28 days’ differentiated neurons of patient and control. (H) Immunofluorescent staining of 28 days’ differentiated neurons from patient and control. Differentiated neurons expressed neuronal markers DCX and MAP2A. (I) The majority of 28 days’ differentiated cells were positive for the neuronal marker ßIII-tubulin with low amount of cell expressing the glia marker GFAP. Scale bar 100 µm.
Figure 3NF186 isoform expression during neural differentiation. (A) RT-qPCR analysis of NF186 isoform using NESCs (day 0) and collected cells at different time points of differentiation (days 14, 28, 42, and 56) from patient and control. Control cells upregulated NF186 mRNA soon after growth factors removal, while patient cells did not express any NF186 mRNA containing exon 26. Results represented as fold change. Relative expression values were determined after normalizing the mRNA levels to GAPDH and to day 0 of Control. n = 3 biological replicates per cell line per time point. Error bars represented ± standard error of mean; Significance is indicated as *p < 0.05, **p < 0.005. Primers are listed in . (B) Immunofluorescent staining of NF186 and MAP2A in 56-day-old neuronal differentiation culture of control cells. NF186 expression was excluded from the dendrite marker MAP2A. Scale bar 50 µm. (C) Western blot indicating the expression of NF186 and NF155 in patient and control cells at days 28 and 56 of neuronal differentiation. Densitometry analysis showed significant reduction of NF186 in patient cells, while NF155 reduction was not significant at both days of analysis. Protein expression was normalized to expression of β-actin. (D) Western blot showing expression of ankyrin-G in patient and control cells at days 28 and 56 of differentiation. Densitometry analysis showed significant reduction of ankyrin-G in patient cells at day 28 (p ≤ 0.05) and day 56 (p ≤ 0.001). Protein expression was normalized to expression of β-actin. n = 3 biological replicates per cell line per time point. Error bars represented ± standard error of mean; Significance is indicated as *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001, ns, not significant.
Figure 4Aberrant neurite extension and different sodium channel recording. (A) Bright-filed microscopy of control and patient Matrigel-embedded neurospheres. (B, C) Graphs from quantified data analysis representing number and length of neurites from control and patient neurospheres. (B) Number of emerging neurites from patient neurospheres was significantly fewer than control. (C) Average length of patient neurites was significantly shorter that control neurospheres. Each dot represents the average number of neurites or neurite length per neurosphere, and the vertical line represents the mean per cell line. Significance is indicated as *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005; ***p < 0.000. (D) mRNA expression of SLIT3 during differentiation in NESC (day 0) and day 7 from patient (III:4) and control lines. Patient cells significantly upregulated SLIT3 mRNA upon 1-week differentiation. (E, F) mRNA expression of neuronal differentiation markers DCX and MAP2A at NESC (day 0) and differentiation time points (days 14, 28, and 42) in control and patient cell lines. Patient cells expressed less MAP2A and DCX compared to control upon differentiation. (G) Capacitance measurements to compare cell sizes between iPSC-derived neurons from control (Ctrl, blue circles) and patient (red squares). Unpaired t test with Welch’s correction (control n = 5, patient n = 5) indicates similar capacitance for neurons from both lineages. (H) Current-voltage relationship of whole-cell currents of iPSC-derived neurons from control (Ctrl) and patient. Data points represent average sodium current density [INa (pA)/size of the cell (pF)] as a function of the membrane potential (mV). The current density in cells derived from patient is reduced when compared to those of control (**p < 0.001; ***p < 0.000). In addition, Na+ current is activated at a 10-mV more negative membrane potential in neurons derived from patient when compared to those from control. Statistical analysis was performed by two-way ANOVA following Bonferroni posttest (Ctrl3 n = 5, III:4 n = 5). All errors: ± standard error of mean.