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Biallelic loss of human CTNNA2, encoding αN-catenin, leads to ARP2/3 complex overactivity and disordered cortical neuronal migration

Authors :
Schaffer, Ashleigh E
Breuss, Martin W
Caglayan, Ahmet Okay
Al-Sanaa, Nouriya
Al-Abdulwahed, Hind Y
Kaymakçalan, Hande
Yılmaz, Cahide
Zaki, Maha S
Rosti, Rasim O
Copeland, Brett
Baek, Seung Tae
Musaev, Damir
Scott, Eric C
Ben-Omran, Tawfeg
Kariminejad, Ariana
Kayserili, Hulya
Mojahedi, Faezeh
Kara, Majdi
Cai, Na
Silhavy, Jennifer L
Elsharif, Seham
Fenercioglu, Elif
Barshop, Bruce A
Kara, Bulent
Wang, Rengang
Stanley, Valentina
James, Kiely N
Nachnani, Rahul
Kalur, Aneesha
Megahed, Hisham
Incecik, Faruk
Danda, Sumita
Alanay, Yasemin
Faqeih, Eissa
Melikishvili, Gia
Mansour, Lobna
Miller, Ian
Sukhudyan, Biayna
Chelly, Jamel
Dobyns, William B
Bilguvar, Kaya
Jamra, Rami Abou
Gunel, Murat
Gleeson, Joseph G
Source :
Nature genetics, vol 50, iss 8
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Neuronal migration defects, including pachygyria, are among the most severe developmental brain defects in humans. Here, we identify biallelic truncating mutations in CTNNA2, encoding αN-catenin, in patients with a distinct recessive form of pachygyria. CTNNA2 was expressed in human cerebral cortex, and its loss in neurons led to defects in neurite stability and migration. The αN-catenin paralog, αE-catenin, acts as a switch regulating the balance between β-catenin and Arp2/3 actin filament activities1. Loss of αN-catenin did not affect β-catenin signaling, but recombinant αN-catenin interacted with purified actin and repressed ARP2/3 actin-branching activity. The actin-binding domain of αN-catenin or ARP2/3 inhibitors rescued the neuronal phenotype associated with CTNNA2 loss, suggesting ARP2/3 de-repression as a potential disease mechanism. Our findings identify CTNNA2 as the first catenin family member with biallelic mutations in humans, causing a new pachygyria syndrome linked to actin regulation, and uncover a key factor involved in ARP2/3 repression in neurons.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics, vol 50, iss 8
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..068401e6d8c7bcef8afba6331e1ecd0d