TDP-43 is a predominantly nuclear RNA-binding protein that forms inclusion bodies in frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The mRNA targets of TDP-43 in the human brain and its role in RNA processing are largely unknown. Using individual-nucleotide resolution UV-crosslinking and immunoprecipitation (iCLIP), we demonstrated that TDP-43 preferentially binds long clusters of UG-rich sequences in vivo. Analysis of TDP-43 RNA binding in FTLD-TDP brains revealed the greatest increases in binding to MALAT1 and NEAT1 non-coding RNAs. We also showed that TDP-43 binding on pre-mRNAs influences alternative splicing in a similar position-dependent manner to Nova proteins. In addition, we identified unusually long clusters of TDP-43 binding at deep intronic positions downstream of silenced exons. A significant proportion of alternative mRNA isoforms regulated by TDP-43 encode proteins that regulate neuronal development or are implicated in neurological diseases, highlighting the importance of TDP-43 for splicing regulation in the brain.
Summary
The RNA binding protein TDP-43 regulates RNA metabolism at multiple
levels, including transcription, RNA splicing, and mRNA stability. TDP-43 is a
major component of the cytoplasmic inclusions characteristic of amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis and some types of frontotemporal lobar degeneration. The
importance of TDP-43 in disease is underscored by the fact that dominant
missense mutations are sufficient to cause disease, although the role of TDP-43
in pathogenesis is unknown. Here we show that TDP-43 forms cytoplasmic mRNP
granules that undergo bidirectional, microtubule-dependent transport in neurons
in vitro and in vivo and facilitate
delivery of target mRNA to distal neuronal compartments. TDP-43 mutations impair
this mRNA transport function in vivo and in
vitro, including in stem cell-derived motor neurons from ALS
patients bearing any one of three different TDP-43 ALS-causing mutations. Thus,
TDP43 mutations that cause ALS lead to partial loss of a novel cytoplasmic
function of TDP-43.
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