PUBLICATION

Peripheral Neuropathy and Decreased Locomotion of a RAB40B Mutation in Human and Model Animals

Authors
Son, W., Jeong, H.S., Nam, D.E., Lee, A.J., Nam, S.H., Lee, J.E., Choi, B.O., Chung, K.W.
ID
ZDB-PUB-240110-22
Date
2023
Source
Experimental Neurobiology   32: 410422410-422 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Jeong, Hui Su, Lee, Ji Eun
Keywords
Drosophila, Peripheral neuropathy, RAB40B, SOCS box, Zebrafish
MeSH Terms
none
PubMed
38196136 Full text @ Exp. Neurobiol.
Abstract
Rab40 proteins are an atypical subgroup of Rab GTPases containing a unique suppressor of the cytokine signaling (SOCS) domain that is recruited to assemble the CRL5 E3 ligase complex for proteolytic regulation in various biological processes. A nonsense mutation deleting the C-terminal SOCS box in the RAB40B gene was identified in a family with axonal peripheral neuropathy (Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2), and pathogenicity of the mutation was assessed in model organisms of zebrafish and Drosophila. Compared to control fish, zebrafish larvae transformed by the human mutant hRAB40B-Y83X showed a defective swimming pattern of stalling with restricted localization and slower motility. We were consistently able to observe reduced labeling of synaptic markers along neuromuscular junctions of the transformed larvae. In addition to the neurodevelopmental phenotypes, compared to normal hRAB40B expression, we further examined ectopic expression of hRAB40B-Y83X in Drosophila to show a progressive decline of locomotion ability. Decreased ability of locomotion by ubiquitous expression of the human mutation was reproduced not with GAL4 drivers for neuron-specific expression but only when a pan-glial GAL4 driver was applied. Using the ectopic expression model of Drosophila, we identified a genetic interaction in which Cul5 down regulation exacerbated the defective motor performance, showing a consistent loss of SOCS box of the pathogenic RAB40B. Taken together, we could assess the possible gain-of-function of the human RAB40B mutation by comparing behavioral phenotypes in animal models; our results suggest that the mutant phenotypes may be associated with CRL5-mediated proteolytic regulation.
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