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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Cruts M, Gijselinck I, van der Zee J, Engelborghs S, Wils H, Pirici D, Rademakers R, Vandenberghe R, Dermaut B, Martin JJ, van Duijn C, Peeters K, Sciot R, Santens P, De Pooter T, Mattheijssens M, Van den Broeck M, Cuijt I, Vennekens K, De Deyn PP, Kumar-Singh S, Van Broeckhoven C. Null mutations in progranulin cause ubiquitin-positive frontotemporal dementia linked to chromosome 17q21. Nature. 2006 Aug 24;442(7105):920-4. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Birds of a Feather…Mutations in Tau Gene Neighbor Progranulin Cause FTD

Comment by:  John Hardy, ARF Advisor
Submitted 17 July 2006  |  Permalink Posted 17 July 2006

The identification of progranulin mutations by Baker and colleagues is a major advance in our understanding of frontal temporal dementia (FTD). The work by both Baker and Cruts and their colleagues shows that loss of progranulin function is a major cause of FTD, at least in some populations. These findings are remarkable for several reasons: first, this is the first simple loss-of-function autosomal dominant disease; second, it suggests that the genetic linkage of two FTD loci with similar clinical features, but different pathologies, close to the same locus was just a confusing coincidence. Third, it will undoubtedly spawn a huge amount of effort to define the limits of the phenotype and to elucidate its precise function in the CNS. It will also be interesting to see whether other diseases with ubiquitin inclusions will share related pathogenic mechanisms.

View all comments by John Hardy

  Primary News: Birds of a Feather…Mutations in Tau Gene Neighbor Progranulin Cause FTD

Comment by:  Virginia Lee, ARF Advisor, John Trojanowski, ARF Advisor
Submitted 17 July 2006  |  Permalink Posted 17 July 2006

These studies are spectacular advances in FTD research that open up new avenues for understanding mechanisms of FTLD-U. Notably, since progranulin proteins, or derivatives thereof, were not found in the ubiquitin inclusions of these FTLD-U disorders, it will be important to identify the ubiquitinated disease protein(s) that form these hallmark lesions of FTLD-U.

View all comments by Virginia Lee
View all comments by John Trojanowski

  Primary News: Birds of a Feather…Mutations in Tau Gene Neighbor Progranulin Cause FTD

Comment by:  Andrew Kertesz
Submitted 18 July 2006  |  Permalink Posted 18 July 2006

Both of these papers represent a significant discovery of a novel mutation on progranulin, a protein with no known CNS function. It is a known growth factor in vasculo and tumorigenesis, and it may turn out to have nerve growth factor properties as well; therefore, it is reasonable to postulate that a molecular deficit caused by its mutation could produce neurodegenerative disease such as frontotemporal dementia (FTD). We published the first chromosome 17-linked ubiquitin-positive family from Ontario in 2000 and the first intranuclear ubiquitin-positive inclusions in this and other families (1,2), but these genetic teams deserve credit for finding the mutation.

What is extraordinary is that progranulin is very close to the tau gene on chromosome 17, the known culprit in the mutated form in FTD linked to 17. How the two different genes interact, if at all, to cause a very similar illness is yet to be determined. The relationship of progranulin mechanisms to chromosome 9-linked cases and the valosin mutation with FTD and myopathy also deserves attention.

References:
1. Kertesz A, Kawarai T, Rogaeva E, St George-Hyslop P, Poorkaj P, Bird TD, Munoz DG. Familial frontotemporal dementia with ubiquitin-positive, tau-negative inclusions. Neurology. 2000 Feb 22;54(4):818-27. Abstract

2. Woulfe J, Kertesz A, Munoz DG. Frontotemporal dementia with ubiquitinated cytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions. Acta Neuropathol 2001;102:94-102. Abstract

View all comments by Andrew Kertesz

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Histological staining of brain sections used the following antibodies: tau, Amyloid-beta, polyclonal anti-ubiquitin antibody (DAKO), anti-human Progranulin (R&D Systems) or polyclonal antibodies directed against the N or C-terminus of PGRN (acrogranin N-19 and S-15, Santa Cruz).

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