Botzolakis_2011_Mol.Cell.Neurosci_46_122

Reference

Title : The effect of HSP-causing mutations in SPG3A and NIPA1 on the assembly, trafficking, and interaction between atlastin-1 and NIPA1 - Botzolakis_2011_Mol.Cell.Neurosci_46_122
Author(s) : Botzolakis EJ , Zhao J , Gurba KN , Macdonald RL , Hedera P
Ref : Molecular & Cellular Neurosciences , 46 :122 , 2011
Abstract :

Despite its genetic heterogeneity, hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is characterized by similar clinical phenotypes, suggesting that a common biochemical pathway underlies its pathogenesis. In support of this hypothesis, we used a combination of immunoprecipitation, confocal microscopy, and flow cytometry to demonstrate that two HSP-associated proteins, atlastin-1 and NIPA1, are direct binding partners, and interestingly, that the endogenous expression and trafficking of these proteins is highly dependent upon their coexpression. In addition, we demonstrated that the cellular distribution of atlastin-1:NIPA1 complexes was dramatically altered by HSP-causing mutations, as missense mutations in atlastin-1 (R239C and R495W) and NIPA1 (T45R and G106R) caused protein sequestration in the Golgi complex (GC) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER), respectively. Moreover, we demonstrated that HSP-causing mutations in both atlastin-1 and NIPA1 reduced axonal and dendritic sprouting in cultured rat cortical neurons. Together, these findings support the hypothesis that NIPA1 and atlastin-1 are members of a common biochemical pathway that supports axonal maintenance, which may explain in part the characteristic degeneration of long spinal pathways observed in patients with HSP.

PubMedSearch : Botzolakis_2011_Mol.Cell.Neurosci_46_122
PubMedID: 20816793

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Citations formats

Botzolakis EJ, Zhao J, Gurba KN, Macdonald RL, Hedera P (2011)
The effect of HSP-causing mutations in SPG3A and NIPA1 on the assembly, trafficking, and interaction between atlastin-1 and NIPA1
Molecular & Cellular Neurosciences 46 :122

Botzolakis EJ, Zhao J, Gurba KN, Macdonald RL, Hedera P (2011)
Molecular & Cellular Neurosciences 46 :122