Spectrin mutations cause spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 |
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Authors: | Ikeda Yoshio Dick Katherine A Weatherspoon Marcy R Gincel Dan Armbrust Karen R Dalton Joline C Stevanin Giovanni Dürr Alexandra Zühlke Christine Bürk Katrin Clark H Brent Brice Alexis Rothstein Jeffrey D Schut Lawrence J Day John W Ranum Laura P W |
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Affiliation: | Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development, University of Minnesota, 321 Church St. SE, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455 USA. |
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Abstract: | We have discovered that beta-III spectrin (SPTBN2) mutations cause spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 (SCA5) in an 11-generation American kindred descended from President Lincoln's grandparents and two additional families. Two families have separate in-frame deletions of 39 and 15 bp, and a third family has a mutation in the actin/ARP1 binding region. Beta-III spectrin is highly expressed in Purkinje cells and has been shown to stabilize the glutamate transporter EAAT4 at the surface of the plasma membrane. We found marked differences in EAAT4 and GluRdelta2 by protein blot and cell fractionation in SCA5 autopsy tissue. Cell culture studies demonstrate that wild-type but not mutant beta-III spectrin stabilizes EAAT4 at the plasma membrane. Spectrin mutations are a previously unknown cause of ataxia and neurodegenerative disease that affect membrane proteins involved in glutamate signaling. |
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