Abstract

Expanded trinucleotide repeat sequences are the cause of several inherited neurodegenerative diseases. Disease pathogenesis is correlated with several features of somatic instability of these sequences, including further large expansions in postmitotic tissues. The presence of somatic expansions in postmitotic tissues is consistent with DNA repair being a major determinant of somatic instability. Indeed, proteins in the mismatch repair (MMR) pathway are required for instability of the expanded (CAG·CTG)n sequence, likely via recognition of intrastrand hairpins by MutSβ. It is not clear if or how MMR would affect instability of disease-causing expanded trinucleotide repeat sequences that adopt secondary structures other than hairpins, such as the triplex/R-loop forming (GAA·TTC)n sequence that causes Friedreich ataxia. We analyzed somatic instability in transgenic mice that carry an expanded (GAA·TTC)n sequence in the context of the human FXN locus and lack the individual MMR proteins Msh2, Msh6 or Pms2. The absence of Msh2 or Msh6 resulted in a dramatic reduction in somatic mutations, indicating that mammalian MMR promotes instability of the (GAA·TTC)n sequence via MutSα. The absence of Pms2 resulted in increased accumulation of large expansions in the nervous system (cerebellum, cerebrum, and dorsal root ganglia) but not in non-neuronal tissues (heart and kidney), without affecting the prevalence of contractions. Pms2 suppressed large expansions specifically in tissues showing MutSα-dependent somatic instability, suggesting that they may act on the same lesion or structure associated with the expanded (GAA·TTC)n sequence. We conclude that Pms2 specifically suppresses large expansions of a pathogenic trinucleotide repeat sequence in neuronal tissues, possibly acting independently of the canonical MMR pathway.

Highlights

  • Expanded trinucleotide repeat sequences are known to cause several inherited human neurodegenerative diseases [1]

  • An expanded (GAA?TTC)n sequence within a human FXN transgene recapitulated the age-dependent and tissue-specific somatic instability observed in Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) patients [6], and rescuing the embryonic-lethal Fxn-deficient mice with this transgene resulted in an FRDA-like phenotype [9,10]

  • Our results show that while mammalian mismatch repair (MMR) promotes somatic instability of the (GAA?TTC)n sequence, Pms2 plays a unique role in suppressing large somatic expansions in neuronal tissues

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Summary

Introduction

Expanded trinucleotide repeat sequences are known to cause several inherited human neurodegenerative diseases [1]. Expanded trinucleotide repeats undergo further large expansions in specific somatic tissues. Both forms of instability appear to influence disease onset and progression, it is likely that intergenerational and somatic instability occur by distinct mechanisms. An expanded (GAA?TTC)n sequence within a human FXN transgene recapitulated the age-dependent and tissue-specific somatic instability observed in FRDA patients [6], and rescuing the embryonic-lethal Fxn-deficient mice with this transgene resulted in an FRDA-like phenotype [9,10]. When a similar-sized (GAA?TTC)n repeat was knocked-in into the mouse Fxn gene, the sequence did not show somatic instability, and it was not possible to replicate the FRDA phenotype [11]. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of somatic instability of disease-causing expanded trinucleotide repeats in somatic tissues is of great interest

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