Literature DB >> 32259886

TGM6 variants in Parkinson's disease: clinical findings and functional evidence.

Kui Chen1,2, You Lu1, Fang Peng2, Hui-Ling Yu2, Jia-Yan Wu1, Yan Tan1, Yan-Xin Zhao1.   

Abstract

TGM6 encodes transglutaminase 6, which catalyzes the covalent crosslinking of proteins through transamination reactions. Variants in TGM6 have been identified as the cause of spinocerebellar ataxia type 35. However, we found 12 TGM6 variants of low frequency among 308 patients with Parkinson's disease using next-generation sequencing technologies and multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification, including two variants TGM6 p.R111C and p.L517W, which have been reported to affect functions of transglutaminase 6 in spinocerebellar ataxia type 35 cases. The characteristics of these TGM6 carriers were summarized. To clarify the role of TGM6 variants in Parkinson's disease, we constructed the plasmids of wild-type TGM6 and TGM6 p.R111C, p.P359L, p.L517W to transfect A53T-SH-SY5Y cells and conducted transglutaminase assay, western blots, immunofluorescence, and cell viability assay. Results revealed that the distribution and expression levels of transglutaminase 6 were not affected by TGM6 variants. However, the variants showed lower transglutaminase activity than wild-type transglutaminase 6. The overexpression of wild-type TGM6 was proved to relieve the cell damage, down-regulate the level of α-synuclein and enhance autophagy. These effects were weakened in cells transfected with mutant TGM6 plasmids. Our results suggested that there may be some relationship between TGM6 and Parkinson's disease. TGM6 carriers in Parkinson's disease patients presented with typical parkinsonism but progressed slower. The high expression level of wild-type transglutaminase 6 may protect cells by decreasing α-synuclein and enhancing autophagy.
© 2020 Chen et al. Published by IMR press.

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Keywords:  Parkinson's disease; genetic testing; transglutaminase 6; variant

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32259886     DOI: 10.31083/j.jin.2020.01.1203

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Integr Neurosci        ISSN: 0219-6352            Impact factor:   2.117


  1 in total

1.  Neither a Novel Tau Proteinopathy nor an Expansion of a Phenotype: Reappraising Clinicopathology-Based Nosology.

Authors:  Luca Marsili; Jennifer Sharma; Alberto J Espay; Alice Migazzi; Elhusseini Abdelghany; Emily J Hill; Kevin R Duque; Matthew C Hagen; Christopher D Stephen; Gabor G Kovacs; Anthony E Lang; Marios Hadjivassiliou; Manuela Basso; Marcelo A Kauffman; Andrea Sturchio
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-07-07       Impact factor: 5.923

  1 in total

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