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Gaël Yvert, Katrin S. Lindenberg, Serge Picaud, G. Bernhard Landwehrmeyer, José‐Alain Sahel, Jean-Louis Mandel, Expanded polyglutamines induce neurodegeneration and trans-neuronal alterations in cerebellum and retina of SCA7 transgenic mice, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 9, Issue 17, 12 October 2000, Pages 2491–2506, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/9.17.2491
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Abstract
Among the eight progressive neurodegenerative diseases caused by polyglutamine expansions, spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7) is the only one to display degeneration in both brain and retina. We show here that mice overexpressing full-length mutant ataxin-7[Q90] either in Purkinje cells or in rod photoreceptors have deficiencies in motor coordination and vision, respectively. In both models, although with different time courses, an N-terminal fragment of mutant ataxin-7 accumulates into ubiquitinated nuclear inclusions that recruit a distinct set of chaperone/proteasome subunits. A severe degeneration is caused by overexpression of ataxin-7[Q90] in rods, whereas a similar overexpression of normal ataxin-7[Q10] has no obvious effect. The degenerative process is not limited to photoreceptors, showing secondary alterations of post-synaptic neurons. These findings suggest that proteolytic cleavage of mutant ataxin-7 and trans-neuronal responses are implicated in the pathogenesis of SCA7.
- animals, transgenic
- mice, transgenic
- molecular chaperones
- nerve degeneration
- neurons
- photoreceptors
- purkinje cells
- rod photoreceptors
- spectroscopy, near-infrared
- ubiquitin
- antibodies
- brain
- cerebellum
- mice
- retina
- spinocerebellar ataxia type 7
- multicatalytic endopeptidase complex
- protein overexpression
- proteolysis
- tissue degeneration
- polyglutamine