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Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss

Tay-Sachs disease is a severe lysosomal disorder caused by mutations in the HexA gene coding for the α-subunit of lysosomal β-hexosaminidase A, which converts G(M2) to G(M3) ganglioside. Hexa(−/−) mice, depleted of β-hexosaminidase A, remain asymptomatic to 1 year of age, because they catabolise G(M...

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Autores principales: Seyrantepe, Volkan, Lema, Pablo, Caqueret, Aurore, Dridi, Larbi, Bel Hadj, Samar, Carpentier, Stephane, Boucher, Francine, Levade, Thierry, Carmant, Lionel, Gravel, Roy A., Hamel, Edith, Vachon, Pascal, Di Cristo, Graziella, Michaud, Jacques L., Morales, Carlos R., Pshezhetsky, Alexey V.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2940724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862357
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001118
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author Seyrantepe, Volkan
Lema, Pablo
Caqueret, Aurore
Dridi, Larbi
Bel Hadj, Samar
Carpentier, Stephane
Boucher, Francine
Levade, Thierry
Carmant, Lionel
Gravel, Roy A.
Hamel, Edith
Vachon, Pascal
Di Cristo, Graziella
Michaud, Jacques L.
Morales, Carlos R.
Pshezhetsky, Alexey V.
author_facet Seyrantepe, Volkan
Lema, Pablo
Caqueret, Aurore
Dridi, Larbi
Bel Hadj, Samar
Carpentier, Stephane
Boucher, Francine
Levade, Thierry
Carmant, Lionel
Gravel, Roy A.
Hamel, Edith
Vachon, Pascal
Di Cristo, Graziella
Michaud, Jacques L.
Morales, Carlos R.
Pshezhetsky, Alexey V.
author_sort Seyrantepe, Volkan
collection PubMed
description Tay-Sachs disease is a severe lysosomal disorder caused by mutations in the HexA gene coding for the α-subunit of lysosomal β-hexosaminidase A, which converts G(M2) to G(M3) ganglioside. Hexa(−/−) mice, depleted of β-hexosaminidase A, remain asymptomatic to 1 year of age, because they catabolise G(M2) ganglioside via a lysosomal sialidase into glycolipid G(A2), which is further processed by β-hexosaminidase B to lactosyl-ceramide, thereby bypassing the β-hexosaminidase A defect. Since this bypass is not effective in humans, infantile Tay-Sachs disease is fatal in the first years of life. Previously, we identified a novel ganglioside metabolizing sialidase, Neu4, abundantly expressed in mouse brain neurons. Now we demonstrate that mice with targeted disruption of both Neu4 and Hexa genes (Neu4 (−/−);Hexa (−/−)) show epileptic seizures with 40% penetrance correlating with polyspike discharges on the cortical electrodes of the electroencephalogram. Single knockout Hexa (−/−) or Neu4 (−/−) siblings do not show such symptoms. Further, double-knockout but not single-knockout mice have multiple degenerating neurons in the cortex and hippocampus and multiple layers of cortical neurons accumulating G(M2) ganglioside. Together, our data suggest that the Neu4 block exacerbates the disease in Hexa(−/−) mice, indicating that Neu4 is a modifier gene in the mouse model of Tay-Sachs disease, reducing the disease severity through the metabolic bypass. However, while disease severity in the double mutant is increased, it is not profound suggesting that Neu4 is not the only sialidase contributing to the metabolic bypass in Hexa (−/−) mice.
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spelling pubmed-29407242010-09-22 Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss Seyrantepe, Volkan Lema, Pablo Caqueret, Aurore Dridi, Larbi Bel Hadj, Samar Carpentier, Stephane Boucher, Francine Levade, Thierry Carmant, Lionel Gravel, Roy A. Hamel, Edith Vachon, Pascal Di Cristo, Graziella Michaud, Jacques L. Morales, Carlos R. Pshezhetsky, Alexey V. PLoS Genet Research Article Tay-Sachs disease is a severe lysosomal disorder caused by mutations in the HexA gene coding for the α-subunit of lysosomal β-hexosaminidase A, which converts G(M2) to G(M3) ganglioside. Hexa(−/−) mice, depleted of β-hexosaminidase A, remain asymptomatic to 1 year of age, because they catabolise G(M2) ganglioside via a lysosomal sialidase into glycolipid G(A2), which is further processed by β-hexosaminidase B to lactosyl-ceramide, thereby bypassing the β-hexosaminidase A defect. Since this bypass is not effective in humans, infantile Tay-Sachs disease is fatal in the first years of life. Previously, we identified a novel ganglioside metabolizing sialidase, Neu4, abundantly expressed in mouse brain neurons. Now we demonstrate that mice with targeted disruption of both Neu4 and Hexa genes (Neu4 (−/−);Hexa (−/−)) show epileptic seizures with 40% penetrance correlating with polyspike discharges on the cortical electrodes of the electroencephalogram. Single knockout Hexa (−/−) or Neu4 (−/−) siblings do not show such symptoms. Further, double-knockout but not single-knockout mice have multiple degenerating neurons in the cortex and hippocampus and multiple layers of cortical neurons accumulating G(M2) ganglioside. Together, our data suggest that the Neu4 block exacerbates the disease in Hexa(−/−) mice, indicating that Neu4 is a modifier gene in the mouse model of Tay-Sachs disease, reducing the disease severity through the metabolic bypass. However, while disease severity in the double mutant is increased, it is not profound suggesting that Neu4 is not the only sialidase contributing to the metabolic bypass in Hexa (−/−) mice. Public Library of Science 2010-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2940724/ /pubmed/20862357 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001118 Text en Seyrantepe et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Seyrantepe, Volkan
Lema, Pablo
Caqueret, Aurore
Dridi, Larbi
Bel Hadj, Samar
Carpentier, Stephane
Boucher, Francine
Levade, Thierry
Carmant, Lionel
Gravel, Roy A.
Hamel, Edith
Vachon, Pascal
Di Cristo, Graziella
Michaud, Jacques L.
Morales, Carlos R.
Pshezhetsky, Alexey V.
Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title_full Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title_fullStr Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title_full_unstemmed Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title_short Mice Doubly-Deficient in Lysosomal Hexosaminidase A and Neuraminidase 4 Show Epileptic Crises and Rapid Neuronal Loss
title_sort mice doubly-deficient in lysosomal hexosaminidase a and neuraminidase 4 show epileptic crises and rapid neuronal loss
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2940724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20862357
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001118
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