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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Lim J, Crespo-Barreto J, Jafar-Nejad P, Bowman AB, Richman R, Hill DE, Orr HT, Zoghbi HY. Opposing effects of polyglutamine expansion on native protein complexes contribute to SCA1. Nature. 2008 Apr 10;452(7188):713-8. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Research Brief: Gain or Loss of Function? Ataxin Mutation Cuts Both Ways

Comment by:  Michael Wolfe, ARF Advisor
Submitted 15 March 2008  |  Permalink Posted 15 March 2008

This report provides evidence that 1) disease-causing polyglutamine expansion in ataxin-1 can lead to increases in ATX1 assembly into complexes containing RNA-binding motif protein 17 (RBM17) and decreases in its assembly into complexes containing capicua (CIC); 2) the interaction between ATX1 and RBM17 may involve phosphorylation of a particular serine in ATX1; 3) genetic interaction between ATX1 and RBM17 in the Drosophila eye contributes to retinal degeneration; 4) RBM17 and CIC compete with each other for ATX1 complexation; and 5) compared to mice that have one polyQ mutant allele and one wild-type allele, loss of the wild-type ATX1 allele exacerbates neuropathology. This last point is particularly meaningful, because ATX1 knockout mice do not develop the neurodegenerative phenotype.

Taken together, the authors suggest that polyQ expansion of ATX1 leads to neurodegeneration through both a gain-of-function interaction with RBM17 and a loss-of-function interaction with CIC. In this regard, the evidence for the general idea that duel gain/loss of function contributes...  Read more

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