The zinc finger protein ZPR1 is a potential modifier of spinal muscular atrophy
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by mutation of the Survival Motor Neurons 1 (SMN1) gene and is characterized by degeneration of spinal motor neurons. The severity of SMA is primarily influenced by the copy number of the SMN2 gene. Additional modifier genes that lie outside the SMA locus exist and one gene that could modify SMA is the Zinc Finger Protein (ZPR1) gene. To test the significance of ZPR1 downregulation in SMA, we examined the effect of reduced ZPR1 expression in mice with mild and severe SMA. We report that the reduced ZPR1 expression causes increase in the loss of motor neurons, hypermyelination in phrenic nerves, increase in respiratory distress and disease severity and reduces the lifespan of SMA mice. The deficiency of SMN-containing sub-nuclear bodies correlates with the severity of SMA. ZPR1 is required for the accumulation of SMN in sub-nuclear bodies. Further, we report that ZPR1 overexpression increases levels of SMN and promotes accumulation of SMN in sub-nuclear bodies in SMA patient fibroblasts. ZPR1 stimulates neurite growth and rescues axonal growth defects in SMN-deficient spinal cord neurons from SMA mice. These data suggest that the severity of disease correlates negatively with ZPR1 levels and ZPR1 may be a protective modifier of SMA. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Publication Date
6-1-2012
Publication Title
Human Molecular Genetics
ISSN
09646906
E-ISSN
14602083
Volume
21
Issue
12
First Page
2745
Last Page
2758
PubMed ID
22422766
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1093/hmg/dds102
Recommended Citation
Ahmad, Saif; Wang, Yi; Shaik, Gouse M.; Burghes, Arthur H.; and Gangwani, Laxman, "The zinc finger protein ZPR1 is a potential modifier of spinal muscular atrophy" (2012). Translational Neuroscience. 521.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurobiology/521