Piermarini Emanuela, Akarsu Seyma, Connors Theresa, Kneussel Matthias, Lane Michael A, Morfini Gerardo, Karabay Arzu, Baas Peter W, Qiang Liang
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19129, USA.
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul 34469, Turkey.
Hum Mol Genet. 2022 Jun 4;31(11):1844-1859. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddab367.
Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is a disease in which dieback degeneration of corticospinal tracts, accompanied by axonal swellings, leads to gait deficiencies. SPG4-HSP, the most common form of the disease, results from mutations of human spastin gene (SPAST), which is the gene that encodes spastin, a microtubule-severing protein. The lack of a vertebrate model that recapitulates both the etiology and symptoms of SPG4-HSP has stymied the development of effective therapies for the disease. hSPAST-C448Y mice, which express human mutant spastin at the ROSA26 locus, display corticospinal dieback and gait deficiencies but not axonal swellings. On the other hand, mouse spastin gene (Spast)-knockout (KO) mice display axonal swellings but not corticospinal dieback or gait deficiencies. One possibility is that reduced spastin function, resulting in axonal swellings, is not the cause of the disease but exacerbates the toxic effects of the mutant protein. To explore this idea, Spast-KO and hSPAST-C448Y mice were crossbred, and the offspring were compared with the parental lines via histological and behavioral analyses. The crossbred animals displayed axonal swellings as well as earlier onset, worsened gait deficiencies and corticospinal dieback compared with the hSPAST-C448Y mouse. These results, together with observations on changes in histone deacetylases 6 and tubulin modifications in the axon, indicate that each of these three transgenic mouse lines is valuable for investigating a different component of the disease pathology. Moreover, the crossbred mice are the best vertebrate model to date for testing potential therapies for SPG4-HSP.
遗传性痉挛性截瘫(HSP)是一种疾病,其中皮质脊髓束的逆行性变性伴有轴突肿胀,导致步态缺陷。SPG4-HSP是该疾病最常见的形式,由人类痉挛蛋白基因(SPAST)突变引起,该基因编码一种微管切断蛋白——痉挛蛋白。缺乏能够重现SPG4-HSP病因和症状的脊椎动物模型阻碍了该疾病有效治疗方法的开发。在ROSA26位点表达人类突变型痉挛蛋白的hSPAST-C448Y小鼠表现出皮质脊髓束逆行性变性和步态缺陷,但没有轴突肿胀。另一方面,小鼠痉挛蛋白基因(Spast)敲除(KO)小鼠表现出轴突肿胀,但没有皮质脊髓束逆行性变性或步态缺陷。一种可能性是,痉挛蛋白功能降低导致轴突肿胀,这不是疾病的原因,而是加剧了突变蛋白的毒性作用。为了探究这一想法,将Spast-KO小鼠和hSPAST-C448Y小鼠进行杂交,并通过组织学和行为分析将后代与亲本品系进行比较。与hSPAST-C448Y小鼠相比,杂交动物表现出轴突肿胀,以及更早出现、更严重的步态缺陷和皮质脊髓束逆行性变性。这些结果,连同对轴突中组蛋白脱乙酰酶6和微管蛋白修饰变化的观察,表明这三种转基因小鼠品系中的每一种对于研究疾病病理学的不同组成部分都很有价值。此外,杂交小鼠是迄今为止测试SPG4-HSP潜在治疗方法的最佳脊椎动物模型。