Expression of expanded GGC repeats within NOTCH2NLC causes behavioral deficits and neurodegeneration in a mouse model of neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease

Qiong Liu, Kailin Zhang, Yunhee Kang, Yangping Li, Penghui Deng, Yujing Li, Yun Tian, Qiying Sun, Yu Tang, Keqin Xu, Yao Zhou, Jun Ling Wang, Jifeng Guo, Jia Da Li, Kun Xia, Qingtuan Meng, Emily G. Allen, Zhexing Wen, Ziyi Li, Hong JiangLu Shen, Ranhui Duan, Bing Yao, Beisha Tang, Peng Jin, Yongcheng Pan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

GGC repeat expansions within NOTCH2NLC have been identified as the genetic cause of neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID). To understand the molecular pathogenesis of NIID, here, we established both a transgenic mouse model and a human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) model. Expression of the NOTCH2NLC with expanded GGC repeats produced widespread intranuclear and perinuclear polyglycine (polyG), polyalanine (polyA), and polyarginine (polyR) inclusions, leading to behavioral deficits and severe neurodegeneration, which faithfully mimicked the clinical and pathological features associated with NIID. Furthermore, conserved alternative splicing events were identified between the NIID mouse and hNPC models, among which was the enrichment of the binding motifs of hnRNPM, an RNA binding protein known as alternative splicing regulator. Expanded NOTCH2NLC-polyG and NOTCH2NLC-polyA could interact with and sequester hnRNPM, while overexpression of hnRNPM could ameliorate the cellular toxicity. These results together suggested that dysfunction of hnRNPM could play an important role in the molecular pathogenesis of NIID.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbereadd6391
JournalScience Advances
Volume8
Issue number47
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2022
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

MD Anderson CCSG core facilities

  • Biostatistics Resource Group

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