Department of Pediatrics, Linda Crnic Institute for Down Syndrome, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center, University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, 12700 E 19th Avenue, Mail Stop 8608, Aurora, CO 80045, USA.
Gene. 2013 Jan 10;512(2):219-25. doi: 10.1016/j.gene.2012.10.051. Epub 2012 Oct 26.
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common genetic aberration leading to intellectual disability. DS results from an extra copy of the long arm of human chromosome 21 (HSA21) and the increased expression of trisomic genes due to gene dosage. While expression in DS and DS models has been studied extensively at the RNA level, much less is known about expression of trisomic genes at the protein level. We have used quantitative Western blotting with antibodies to 20 proteins encoded by HSA21 to assess trisomic protein expression in lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from patients with DS and in brains from two mouse models of DS. These antibodies have recently become available and the 20 proteins largely have not been investigated previously for their potential contributions to the phenotypic features of DS. Twelve proteins had detectable expression in LCLs and three, CCT8, MX1 and PWP2, showed elevated levels in LCLs derived from patients with DS compared with controls. Antibodies against 15 proteins detected bands of appropriate sizes in lysates from mouse brain cortex. Genes for 12 of these proteins are trisomic in the Tc1 mouse model of DS, but only SIM2 and ZNF295 showed elevated expression in Tc1 cortex when compared with controls. Genes for eight of the 15 proteins are trisomic in the Ts65Dn mouse model of DS, but only ZNF294 was over expressed in cortex. Comparison of trisomic gene expression at the protein level with previous reports at the mRNA level showed many inconsistencies. These may be caused by natural inter-individual variability, differences in the age of mice analyzed, or post-transcriptional regulation of gene dosage effects. These antibodies provide resources for further investigation of the molecular basis of intellectual disability in DS.
唐氏综合征(DS)是导致智力障碍的最常见遗传异常。DS 是由于人类 21 号染色体(HSA21)长臂的额外拷贝和由于基因剂量增加而导致的三体基因表达增加所致。虽然在 RNA 水平上已经广泛研究了 DS 和 DS 模型中的表达,但在蛋白质水平上对三体基因的表达知之甚少。我们使用针对 HSA21 编码的 20 种蛋白质的定量 Western blot 分析,评估了来自 DS 患者的淋巴母细胞系(LCL)和两种 DS 小鼠模型的大脑中的三体蛋白表达。这些抗体最近才问世,并且这 20 种蛋白质以前主要没有研究过它们对 DS 表型特征的潜在贡献。在 LCL 中有 12 种蛋白质具有可检测的表达,其中 3 种,CCT8、MX1 和 PWP2,在来自 DS 患者的 LCL 中表达水平高于对照。针对 15 种蛋白质中的 15 种蛋白质的抗体在来自小鼠大脑皮质的裂解物中检测到适当大小的条带。在 DS 的 Tc1 小鼠模型中,这些蛋白质的基因中有 12 个是三体的,但只有 SIM2 和 ZNF295 与对照相比在 Tc1 皮质中表达升高。在 DS 的 Ts65Dn 小鼠模型中,这 15 种蛋白质中有 8 种基因是三体的,但只有 ZNF294 在皮质中过表达。在蛋白质水平上比较三体基因表达与以前的 mRNA 水平报告显示出许多不一致。这可能是由于个体间的自然变异性、分析的小鼠年龄差异或基因剂量效应的转录后调节所致。这些抗体为进一步研究 DS 中智力障碍的分子基础提供了资源。