Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a common autosomal recessive neuromuscular disorder characterized by degeneration of motor neurons of the spinal cord and muscular atrophy. SMA is caused by alterations to the survival of motor neuron (SMN) gene, the function of which has hitherto been unclear. Here, we present immunoblot analyses showing that normal SMN protein expression undergoes a marked decay in the postnatal period compared with fetal development. Morphological and immunohistochemical analyses of the SMN protein in human fetal tissues showed a general distribution in the cytoplasm, except in muscle cells, where SMN protein was immunolocalized to large cytoplasmic dot-like structures and was tightly associated with membrane-free heavy sedimenting complexes. These cytoplasmic structures were similar in size to gem. The SMN protein was markedly deficient in tissues derived from type I SMA fetuses, including skeletal muscles and, as previously shown, spinal cord. While our data do not help decide whether SMA results from impaired SMN expression in spinal cord, skeletal muscle or both, they suggest a requirement for SMN protein during embryo-fetal development.
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a common autosomal recessive disorder that results in the degeneration of spinal motor neurons. SMA is caused by alterations of the survival motor neuron ( SMN ) gene which encodes a novel protein of hitherto unclear function. The SMN protein associates with ribonucleoprotein particles involved in RNA processing and exhibits an RNA-binding capacity. We have isolated the zebrafish Danio rerio and nematode Caenorhabditis elegans orthologues and have found that the RNA-binding capacity is conserved across species. Purified recombinant SMN proteins from both species showed selectivity to poly(G) homopolymer RNA in vitro, similar to that of the human protein. Studying deletions of the zebrafish SMN protein, we defined an RNA-binding element in exon 2a, which is highly conserved across species, and revealed that its binding activity is modulated by protein domains encoded by exon 2b and exon 3. Finally, the deleted recombinant zebrafish protein mimicking an SMA frameshift mutation showed a dramatic change in vitro in the formation of the RNA-protein complexes. These observations indicate that the RNA-binding capacity of SMN is an evolutionarily conserved function and further support the view that defects in RNA metabolism most likely account for the pathogenesis of SMA.
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by the loss of functional survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) protein. This ubiquitously expressed protein is a component of a novel complex immunodetected in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus, which is associated with complexes involved in mRNA splicing, ribosome biogenesis and transcription. Here, we study a mutant protein corresponding to the N-terminal half of the protein that is encoded by the SMA frameshift mutation SMN 472del5. We show by confocal microscopy that the resulting mutant protein exhibits various distribution patterns in different transiently transfected COS cells. The mutant distributes into the nucleoplasm and/or the nucleolus, whereas the normal SMN protein accumulates at discrete nucleocytoplasmic dot-like structures previously named gems/Cajal bodies. The cell population with the nucleolar distribution is enriched upon treatment with mimosine, a synchronizing drug in late G(1) phase. Co-immunoprecipitation studies carried out on nuclear extracts reveal that both the endogenous SMN and mutant proteins are associated with complexes containing two major non-ribosomal nucleolar proteins, namely nucleolin and protein B23, and that the association is mediated, by among other things, RNA moieties. Both the association of the SMN protein with nucleolin-containing complexes and the nucleolin/B23 complex are disrupted in fibroblasts derived from a type I SMA patient harboring a homozygous SMN1 gene deletion. These findings suggest that altered assembly and/or stability of ribonucleoprotein complexes may contribute to the pathophysiological processes in SMA.
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