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Chen-Hung Ting, Chiao-Wei Lin, Shin-Lan Wen, Hsiu-Mei Hsieh-Li, Hung Li, Stat5 constitutive activation rescues defects in spinal muscular atrophy, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 16, Issue 5, 1 March 2007, Pages 499–514, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddl482
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Abstract
Proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a motor neuron degeneration disorder for which there is currently no effective treatment. Here, we report three compounds (sodium vanadate, trichostatin A and aclarubicin) that effectively enhance SMN2 expression by inducing Stat5 activation in SMA-like mouse embryonic fibroblasts and human SMN2-transfected NSC34 cells. We found that Stat5 activation enhanced SMN2 promoter activity with increase in both full-length and deletion exon 7 SMN transcripts in SMN2-NSC34 cells. Knockdown of Stat5 expression disrupted the effects of sodium vanadate on SMN2 activation but did not influence SMN2 splicing, suggesting that Stat5 signaling is involved in SMN2 transcriptional regulation. In addition, constitutive activation of Stat5 mutant (Stat5A1*6) profoundly increased the number of nuclear gems in SMA-patient lymphocytes and reduced SMA-like motor neuron axon outgrowth defects. These results demonstrate that Stat5 signaling could be a possible pharmacological target for treating SMA.
- signal transduction
- western blotting
- fibroblasts
- aclarubicin
- coiled bodies
- embryo
- exons
- lymphocytes
- motor neurons
- spinal muscular atrophy
- reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
- rna splicing
- rna, double-stranded
- transfection
- vanadates
- antibodies
- mice
- pharmacology
- sodium
- transcriptional control
- tissue degeneration
- treatment effectiveness
- neuronal outgrowth