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Family-based exome sequencing identifies RBM45 as a possible candidate gene for frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Authors :
Anne Sieben
Peter Paul De Deyn
Helena Gossye
Bart Dermaut
Peter De Jonghe
Ivy Cuyt
Julie van der Zee
Jonathan Baets
Cemile Kocoglu
Lubina Dillen
Rik Vandenberghe
Sebastiaan Engelborghs
Patrick Cras
Yalda Baradaran-Heravi
Christine Van Broeckhoven
Molecular Neuroscience and Ageing Research (MOLAR)
BELNEU Consortium
Neurology
Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy
Clinical sciences
Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation
Pathologic Biochemistry and Physiology
Source :
Neurobiology of Disease, 156:105421, 1-9. ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE, Neurobiology of disease, Neurobiology of Disease, Vol 156, Iss, Pp 105421-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Neurodegenerative disorders like frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are pathologically characterized by toxic protein deposition in the cytoplasm or nucleus of affected neurons and glial cells. Many of these aggregated proteins belong to the class of RNA binding proteins (RBP), and, when mutated, account for a significant subset of familial ALS and FTD cases. Here, we present first genetic evidence for the RBP gene RBM45 in the FTD-ALS spectrum. RBM45 shows many parallels with other FTD-ALS associated genes and proteins. Multiple lines of evidence have demonstrated that RBM45 is an RBP that, upon mutation, redistributes to the cytoplasm where it co-aggregates with other RBPs into cytoplasmic stress granules (SG), evolving to persistent toxic TDP-43 immunoreactive inclusions. Exome sequencing in two affected first cousins of a heavily affected early-onset dementia family listed a number of candidate genes. The gene with the highest pathogenicity score was the RBP gene RBM45. In the family, the RBM45 Arg183* nonsense mutation co-segregated in both affected cousins. Validation in an unrelated patient (n = 548) / control (n = 734) cohort identified an additional RBM45 Arg183* carrier with bvFTD on a shared 4 Mb haplotype. Transcript and protein expression analysis demonstrated loss of nuclear RBM45, suggestive of a loss-of-function disease mechanism. Further, two more ultra-rare VUS, one in the nuclear localization signal (NLS, p.Lys456Arg) in an ALS patient and one in the intrinsically disordered homo-oligomer assembly (HOA) domain (p.Arg314Gln) in a patient with nfvPPA were detected. Our findings suggest that the pathomechanisms linking RBM45 with FTD and ALS may be related to its loss of nuclear function as a mediator of mRNA splicing, cytoplasmic retention or its inability to form homo-oligomers, leading to aggregate formation with trapping of other RBPs including TDP-43, which may accumulate into persisted TDP-43 inclusions. ispartof: NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE vol:156 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09699961
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of Disease, 156:105421, 1-9. ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE, Neurobiology of disease, Neurobiology of Disease, Vol 156, Iss, Pp 105421-(2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....243eed00f3d65c2f3b93bd5d7e8938c4