Mutations in the WWOX gene cause a broad range of ultra-rare neurodevelopmental and brain degenerative disorders, associated with a high likelihood of premature death in animal models as well as in humans. The encoded Wwox protein is a WW domain-containing oxidoreductase that participates in crucial biological processes including tumor suppression, cell growth/differentiation and regulation of steroid metabolism, while its role in neural development is less understood. We analyzed the exomes of a family affected with multiple pre- and postnatal anomalies, including cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, severe neurodevelopmental impairment and refractory epilepsy, and identified a segregating homozygous WWOX mutation leading to a premature stop codon. Abnormal cerebral cortex development due to a defective architecture of granular and molecular cell layers was found in the developing brain of a WWOX-deficient human fetus from this family. A similar disorganization of cortical layers was identified in lde/lde rats (carrying a homozygous truncating mutation which disrupts the active Wwox C-terminal domain) investigated at perinatal stages. Transcriptomic analyses of Wwox-depleted human neural progenitor cells showed an impaired expression of a number of neuronal migration-related genes encoding for tubulins, kinesins and associated proteins. These findings indicate that loss of Wwox may affect different cytoskeleton components and alter prenatal cortical development, highlighting a regulatory role of the WWOX gene in migrating neurons across different species.

Loss of Wwox Perturbs Neuronal Migration and Impairs Early Cortical Development / Iacomino, M., Baldassari, S., Tochigi, Y., Kośla, K., Buffelli, F., Torella, A., Severino, M., Paladini, D., Mandarà, L., Riva, A., Scala, M., Balagura, G., Accogli, A., Nigro, V., Minetti, C., Fulcheri, E., Zara, F., Bednarek, A.K., Striano, P., Suzuki, H., et al.. - In: FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 1662-453X. - 14:(2020). [10.3389/fnins.2020.00644]

Loss of Wwox Perturbs Neuronal Migration and Impairs Early Cortical Development

Iacomino, Michele;Paladini, Dario;Scala, Marcello;Nigro, Vincenzo;Striano, Pasquale;
2020

Abstract

Mutations in the WWOX gene cause a broad range of ultra-rare neurodevelopmental and brain degenerative disorders, associated with a high likelihood of premature death in animal models as well as in humans. The encoded Wwox protein is a WW domain-containing oxidoreductase that participates in crucial biological processes including tumor suppression, cell growth/differentiation and regulation of steroid metabolism, while its role in neural development is less understood. We analyzed the exomes of a family affected with multiple pre- and postnatal anomalies, including cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, severe neurodevelopmental impairment and refractory epilepsy, and identified a segregating homozygous WWOX mutation leading to a premature stop codon. Abnormal cerebral cortex development due to a defective architecture of granular and molecular cell layers was found in the developing brain of a WWOX-deficient human fetus from this family. A similar disorganization of cortical layers was identified in lde/lde rats (carrying a homozygous truncating mutation which disrupts the active Wwox C-terminal domain) investigated at perinatal stages. Transcriptomic analyses of Wwox-depleted human neural progenitor cells showed an impaired expression of a number of neuronal migration-related genes encoding for tubulins, kinesins and associated proteins. These findings indicate that loss of Wwox may affect different cytoskeleton components and alter prenatal cortical development, highlighting a regulatory role of the WWOX gene in migrating neurons across different species.
2020
Loss of Wwox Perturbs Neuronal Migration and Impairs Early Cortical Development / Iacomino, M., Baldassari, S., Tochigi, Y., Kośla, K., Buffelli, F., Torella, A., Severino, M., Paladini, D., Mandarà, L., Riva, A., Scala, M., Balagura, G., Accogli, A., Nigro, V., Minetti, C., Fulcheri, E., Zara, F., Bednarek, A.K., Striano, P., Suzuki, H., et al.. - In: FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 1662-453X. - 14:(2020). [10.3389/fnins.2020.00644]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/989733
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