Abstract

Tubulin genes encode a series of homologous proteins used to construct microtubules which are essential for multiple cellular processes. Neural development is particularly reliant on functional microtubule structures. Tubulin genes comprise a large family of genes with very high sequence similarity between multiple family members. Human genetics has demonstrated that a large spectrum of cortical malformations are associated with de novo heterozygous mutations in tubulin genes. However, the absolute requirement for many of these genes in development and disease has not been previously tested in genetic loss of function models. Here we directly test the requirement for Tuba1a, Tubb2a and Tubb2b in the mouse by deleting each gene individually using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing. We show that loss of Tubb2a or Tubb2b does not impair survival but does lead to relatively mild cortical malformation phenotypes. In contrast, loss of Tuba1a is perinatal lethal and leads to significant forebrain dysmorphology. We also present a novel mouse ENU allele of Tuba1a with phenotypes similar to the null allele. This demonstrates the requirements for each of the tubulin genes and levels of functional redundancy are quite different throughout the gene family. The ability of the mouse to survive in the absence of some tubulin genes known to cause disease in humans suggests future intervention strategies for these devastating tubulinopathy diseases.

Highlights

  • Tubulin proteins are fundamental building blocks of the cell and assemble into dynamic microtubules

  • Multiple studies demonstrate that human malformations of cortical development are caused by genetic variants in several tubulin genes

  • We have generated novel deletions of several tubulin genes known to cause human disease to assess if they are required for brain development, or if the human variants act to alter function of the tubulin proteins leading to the pathogenesis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tubulin proteins are fundamental building blocks of the cell and assemble into dynamic microtubules. Mutations in tubulin genes are known to cause multiple human cortical malformations including lissencephaly, polymicrogyria, microcephaly, dysmorphic basal ganglia, and congenital fibrosis of extraocular muscles [2] These are collectively discussed as “tubulinopathies.” Many variants leading to malformations of cortical development have been identified in TUBULIN, ALPHA-1A (TUBA1A) [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18]; TUBULIN, BETA-2A (TUBB2A) [19,20,21,22]; TUBB2B [4, 5, 15, 23,24,25,26,27,28,29]; TUBB3 [2, 15, 30, 31]; TUBB4A [32]; and TUBB/TUBB5 [33]. TUBB3 variants have been found to segregate as dominant traits in large pedigrees [31]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call