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| Abstract: | ||
Spinal
muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by deletion
and/or mutation of the survival motor neuron protein Gene (SMN1) that
results in the expression of a truncated protein lacking the C terminal
exon-7. Whereas SMN has been shown to be an important component of diverse
ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes, its function in neurons is unknown.
We hypothesize that the active transport of SMN may be important for neurite
outgrowth and that disruption of exon-7 could impair its normal intracellular
trafficking. SMN was localized in granules that were associated with cytoskeletal
filament systems and distributed throughout neurites and growth cones.
Live cell imaging of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-SMN granules
revealed rapid, bidirectional and cytoskeletal-dependent movements. Exon-7
was necessary for localization of SMN into the cytoplasm but was not sufficient
for granule formation and transport. A cytoplasmic targeting signal within
exon-7 was identified that could completely redistribute the nuclear protein
D-box binding factor 1 into the cytoplasm. Neurons transfected with SMN
lacking exon-7 had significantly shorter neurites, a defect that could
be rescued by redirecting the exon-7 deletion mutant into neurites by
a targeting sequence from growth-associated protein-43. These findings
provide the first demonstration of cytoskeletal-based active transport
of SMN in neuronal processes and the function of exon-7 in cytoplasmic
localization. Such observations provide motivation to investigate possible
transport defects or inefficiency of SMN associated RNPs in motor neuron
axons in SMA. |