Abstract

ADP-ribosylhydrolase-like 1 (Adprhl1) is a pseudoenzyme expressed in the developing heart myocardium of all vertebrates. In the amphibian Xenopus laevis, knockdown of the two cardiac Adprhl1 protein species (40 and 23 kDa) causes failure of chamber outgrowth but this has only been demonstrated using antisense morpholinos that interfere with RNA-splicing. Transgenic production of 40 kDa Adprhl1 provides only part rescue of these defects. CRISPR/Cas9 technology now enables targeted mutation of the adprhl1 gene in G0-generation embryos with routine cleavage of all alleles. Testing multiple gRNAs distributed across the locus reveals exonic locations that encode critical amino acids for Adprhl1 function. The gRNA recording the highest frequency of a specific ventricle outgrowth phenotype directs Cas9 cleavage of an exon 6 sequence, where microhomology mediated end-joining biases subsequent DNA repairs towards three small in-frame deletions. Mutant alleles encode discrete loss of 1, 3 or 4 amino acids from a di-arginine (Arg271-Arg272) containing peptide loop at the centre of the ancestral ADP-ribosylhydrolase site. Thus despite lacking catalytic activity, it is the modified (adenosine-ribose) substrate binding cleft of Adprhl1 that fulfils an essential role during heart formation. Mutation results in striking loss of myofibril assembly in ventricle cardiomyocytes. The defects suggest Adprhl1 participation from the earliest stage of cardiac myofibrillogenesis and are consistent with previous MO results and Adprhl1 protein localization to actin filament Z-disc boundaries. A single nucleotide change to the gRNA sequence renders it inactive. Mice lacking Adprhl1 exons 3–4 are normal but production of the smaller ADPRHL1 species is unaffected, providing further evidence that cardiac activity is concentrated at the C-terminal protein portion.

Highlights

  • Expression of adprhl1 mRNA is restricted to the heart myocardium and select ocular muscles, in contrast to the multiple tissues that stain for the founding member of the ADP-ribosylhydrolase family, adprh (Fig 1A and 1B)

  • We knocked down adprhl1 activity using morpholino oligonucleotides that target RNA-splicing

  • We have used CRISPR/Cas9 technology to induce mutations across the Xenopus adprhl1 gene in order to build on a previous study of morpholino-mediated adprhl1 expression knockdown

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Summary

Introduction

The embryonic heart forms as a simple, linear muscle tube that subsequently loops and is transformed by growth of the cardiac chambers that balloon out from regions of the tube’s. Growth of the large ventricle within Xenopus tadpoles is sustained over a two month larval period, the initial acquisition of form occurs within four days It commences as a group of cardiomyocytes elongate within the heart tube and transiently align in a rosette pattern [10]. Chaperones and co-chaperones such as Unc45b that facilitate folding of the myofilament proteins have been identified [Reviewed 16] and the number will likely increase, given the size and complexity of sarcomere architecture [Reviewed 17] Models that describe these essential steps during myofibrillogenesis don’t, address the timing and spatial requirements that are fundamental to cardiac chamber growth in the embryo. One gene that exerts a profound effect on myofibril formation during the early stages of heart chamber growth is adprhl, which encodes the protein ADP-ribosylhydrolase-like 1. Results from each species complement each other and point to where critical residues for Adprhl action are located

Adprhl1 gRNA sequences
Cas9 and gRNA injection into Xenopus laevis embryos
Western blot detection of Adprhl1 protein
Immunocytochemistry of Xenopus hearts
Animals
Results
Identification of adprhl1 gRNAs that cause defective heart development
Exon 4 mutation is incomplete so rarely causes heart defects
A single nucleotide change to the exon 6 gRNA sequence abolishes its activity
3.10. Myofibril assembly defects observed in adprhl1 exon 6 mutated hearts
Discussion
Mapping essential regions of the Adprhl1 protein
Full Text
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