Secreted retrovirus-like GAG-domain-containing protein PEG10 is regulated by UBE3A and is involved in Angelman syndrome pathophysiology

分泌型逆转录病毒样GAG结构域蛋白PEG10受UBE3A调控,并参与Angelman综合征的病理生理过程。

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作者:Nikhil J Pandya ,Congwei Wang ,Veronica Costa ,Paul Lopatta ,Sonja Meier ,F Isabella Zampeta ,A Mattijs Punt ,Edwin Mientjes ,Philip Grossen ,Tania Distler ,Manuel Tzouros ,Yasmina Martí ,Balazs Banfai ,Christoph Patsch ,Soren Rasmussen ,Marius Hoener ,Marco Berrera ,Thomas Kremer ,Tom Dunkley ,Martin Ebeling ,Ben Distel ,Ype Elgersma ,Ravi Jagasia

Abstract

Angelman syndrome (AS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by the loss of maternal UBE3A, a ubiquitin protein ligase E3A. Here, we study neurons derived from patients with AS and neurotypical individuals, and reciprocally modulate UBE3A using antisense oligonucleotides. Unbiased proteomics reveal proteins that are regulated by UBE3A in a disease-specific manner, including PEG10, a retrotransposon-derived GAG protein. PEG10 protein increase, but not RNA, is dependent on UBE3A and proteasome function. PEG10 binds to both RNA and ataxia-associated proteins (ATXN2 and ATXN10), localizes to stress granules, and is secreted in extracellular vesicles, modulating vesicle content. Rescue of AS patient-derived neurons by UBE3A reinstatement or PEG10 reduction reveals similarity in transcriptome changes. Overexpression of PEG10 during mouse brain development alters neuronal migration, suggesting that it can affect brain development. These findings imply that PEG10 is a secreted human UBE3A target involved in AS pathophysiology. Keywords: Angelman syndrome; PEG10; RNA-binding protein; UBE3A; extracellular vesicles; hiPSC neurons; retroviral GAG; stress granules.

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