AAGGG repeat expansions trigger RFC1-independent synaptic dysregulation in human CANVAS neurons

Open Access
Authors
  • C.J. Maltby
  • A. Krans
  • S.J. Grudzien
  • Y. Palacios
  • J. Muiños
  • A. Suárez
  • M. Asher
  • S. Willey
  • K. Van Deynze
  • C. Mumm
  • A.P. Boyle
  • A. Cortese
  • A. Ndayisaba
  • V. Khurana
  • S.J. Barmada
  • A.A. Dijkstra
  • P.K. Todd
Publication date 04-09-2024
Journal Science Advances
Article number eadn2321
Volume | Issue number 10 | 36
Number of pages 21
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Cerebellar ataxia with neuropathy and vestibular areflexia syndrome (CANVAS) is a recessively inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by intronic biallelic, nonreference CCCTT/AAGGG repeat expansions within RFC1. To investigate how these repeats cause disease, we generated patient induced pluripotent stem cell–derived neurons (iNeurons). CCCTT/AAGGG repeat expansions do not alter neuronal RFC1 splicing, expression, or DNA repair pathway function. In reporter assays, AAGGG repeats are translated into pentapeptide repeat proteins. However, these proteins and repeat RNA foci were not detected in iNeurons, and overexpression of these repeats failed to induce neuronal toxicity. CANVAS iNeurons exhibit defects in neuronal development and diminished synaptic connectivity that is rescued by CRISPR deletion of a single expanded AAGGG allele. These deficits were neither replicated by RFC1 knockdown in control iNeurons nor rescued by RFC1 reprovision in CANVAS iNeurons. These findings support a repeat-dependent but RFC1 protein–independent cause of neuronal dysfunction in CANVAS, with implications for therapeutic development in this currently untreatable condition.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adn2321
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85203338876
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