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Dysregulation of synaptogenesis genes antecedes motor neuron pathology in spinal muscular atrophy.

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Published:26th Nov 2013
Author: Zhang Z, Pinto AM, Wan L, Wang W, Berg MG, Oliva I et al.
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Ref.:Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013;110(48):19348-53.
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1319280110
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a common genetic motor neuron (MN) degenerative disease and leading hereditary cause of infant mortality, results from survival of motor neuron (SMN) protein deficiency. However, SMN’s ubiquitous expression and housekeeping functions in biogenesis of snRNPs, the spliceosome’s subunits, seems difficult to reconcile with SMA’s MN selective pathology. Here, we sequenced transcriptomes of MNs and adjacent white matter microdissected from spinal cords of presymptomatic SMA mice. This process revealed selective and MN-specific splicing and expression-level perturbations of mRNAs, including those essential for establishing neuromuscular junctions, the first structures that degenerate in SMA. We suggest that SMN’s central role in transcriptome regulation explains the gene-expression perturbations that impair MN function and survival in SMA.

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