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Androgen receptor polyglutamine expansion drives age-dependent quality control defects and muscle dysfunction.

Citation
Nath, S. R., et al. “Androgen Receptor Polyglutamine Expansion Drives Age-Dependent Quality Control Defects And Muscle Dysfunction.”. The Journal Of Clinical Investigation, pp. 3630-3641.
Center University of Michigan
Author Samir R Nath, Zhigang Yu, Theresa A Gipson, Gregory B Marsh, Eriko Yoshidome, Diane M Robins, Sokol Todi V, David E Housman, Andrew P Lieberman
Keywords Muscle Biology, Neuromuscular disease, neuroscience, Protein misfolding, Ubiquitin-proteosome system
Abstract

Skeletal muscle has emerged as a critical, disease-relevant target tissue in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, a degenerative disorder of the neuromuscular system caused by a CAG/polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion in the androgen receptor (AR) gene. Here, we used RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) to identify pathways that are disrupted in diseased muscle using AR113Q knockin mice. This analysis unexpectedly identified substantially diminished expression of numerous ubiquitin/proteasome pathway genes in AR113Q muscle, encoding approximately 30% of proteasome subunits and 20% of E2 ubiquitin conjugases. These changes were age, hormone, and glutamine length dependent and arose due to a toxic gain of function conferred by the mutation. Moreover, altered gene expression was associated with decreased levels of the proteasome transcription factor NRF1 and its activator DDI2 and resulted in diminished proteasome activity. Ubiquitinated ADRM1 was detected in AR113Q muscle, indicating the occurrence of stalled proteasomes in mutant mice. Finally, diminished expression of Drosophila orthologues of NRF1 or ADRM1 promoted the accumulation of polyQ AR protein and increased toxicity. Collectively, these data indicate that AR113Q muscle develops progressive proteasome dysfunction that leads to the impairment of quality control and the accumulation of polyQ AR protein, key features that contribute to the age-dependent onset and progression of this disorder.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume
128
Issue
8
Number of Pages
3630-3641
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1558-8238
DOI
10.1172/JCI99042
Alternate Journal
J. Clin. Invest.
PMID
29809168
PMCID
PMC6063498
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