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ZNHIT3 is defective in PEHO syndrome, a severe encephalopathy with cerebellar granule neuron loss.

Authors :
Anttonen, Anna-Kaisa
Laari, Anni
Kousi, Maria
Yang, Yawei J.
Jääskeläinen, Tiina
Somer, Mirja
Siintola, Eija
Jakkula, Eveliina
Muona, Mikko
Tegelberg, Saara
nnqvist, Tuula Lö
Pihko, Helena
Valanne, Leena
Paetau, Anders
Lun, Melody P.
Hästbacka, Johanna
Kopra, Outi
Joensuu, Tarja
Katsanis, Nicholas
Lehtinen, Maria K.
Source :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology; May2017, Vol. 140 Issue 5, p1267-1279, 13p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Progressive encephalopathy with oedema, hypsarrhythmia, and optic atrophy (PEHO) syndrome is an early childhood onset, severe autosomal recessive encephalopathy characterized by extreme cerebellar atrophy due to almost total granule neuron loss. By combining homozygosity mapping in Finnish families with Sanger sequencing of positional candidate genes and with exome sequencing a homozygous missense substitution of leucine for serine at codon 31 in ZNHIT3 was identified as the primary cause of PEHO syndrome. ZNHIT3 encodes a nuclear zinc finger protein previously implicated in transcriptional regulation and in small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein particle assembly and thus possibly to pre-ribosomal RNA processing. The identified mutation affects a highly conserved amino acid residue in the zinc finger domain of ZNHIT3. Both knockdown and genome editing of znhit3 in zebrafish embryos recapitulate the patients' cerebellar defects, microcephaly and oedema. These phenotypes are rescued by wild-type, but not mutant human ZNHIT3 mRNA, suggesting that the patient missense substitution causes disease through a loss-of-function mechanism. Transfection of cell lines with ZNHIT3 expression vectors showed that the PEHO syndrome mutant protein is unstable. Immunohistochemical analysis of mouse cerebellar tissue demonstrated ZNHIT3 to be expressed in proliferating granule cell precursors, in proliferating and post-mitotic granule cells, and in Purkinje cells. Knockdown of Znhit3 in cultured mouse granule neurons and ex vivo cerebellar slices indicate that ZNHIT3 is indispensable for granule neuron survival and migration, consistent with the zebrafish findings and patient neuropathology. These results suggest that loss-of-function of a nuclear regulator protein underlies PEHO syndrome and imply that establishment of its spatiotemporal interaction targets will be the basis for developing therapeutic approaches and for improved understanding of cerebellar development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068950
Volume :
140
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
122819613
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awx040