A hypomorphic mutation in lpin1 induces progressively improving peripheral neuropathy in the rat

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C8AD6916E380
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A hypomorphic mutation in lpin1 induces progressively improving peripheral neuropathy in the rat
Title of the conference
Meeting of the Peripheral Nerve Society
Author(s)
Nadra K., Mul J. D., Jagalur N. B., Nijman I. J., Toonen P. W., Medard J.-.J., Gres S., de Bruin A., Han G.-.S., Carman G. M., Saulnier-Blache J.-.S., Meijer D., Chrast R., Cuppen E.
Address
Potomac, Maryland, June 25-29, 2011
ISBN
1085-9489
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2011
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
16
Series
Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System
Pages
S95
Language
english
Notes
Publication type : Meeting Abstract
Abstract
The Lpin1 gene encodes the phosphatidate phosphatase (PAP1) enzyme Lipin 1, which plays a critical role in lipid metabolism. In this study we describe the identification and characterization of a rat with a mutated Lpin1 gene (Lpin11Hubr ), generated by N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea mutagenesis. Lpin11Hubr rats are characterized by hindlimb paralysis that is detectable from the second postnatal week. Sequencing of Lpin1 identified a missense mutation in the 5'-end splice site of exon 18 resulting in mis-splicing, a reading frame shift and a premature stop codon. As this mutation does not induce nonsense-mediated decay, it allows the production of a truncated Lipin 1 protein lacking PAP1 activity. As a consequence, Lpin11Hubr rats develop hypomyelination rather than the pronounced demyelination defect characteristic of Lpin1fld/fld mice, which carry a null allele for Lpin1. Furthermore, histological and molecular analyses revealed that this lesion improve in older Lpin11Hubr rats as compared to young Lpin11Hubr rats and Lpin1fld/fld mice. The observed differences between the murine Lpin1fld/fld mutant, with a complete loss of Lipin 1 function, and the Lpin1Hubr rat, with a truncated PAP1 activitydeficient form of Lipin 1, provide additional evidence for suggested non-enzymatic Lipin1 function residing outside of its PAP1 domain. While we are cautious in making a direct parallel between the presented rodent model and human disease, our data may provide new insight into pathogenicity of recently identified human Lpin1 mutations. *These authors contributed equally.
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Create date
01/09/2011 10:01
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:43
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