Genetic Suppression of SMN Mutations in Spinal Muscular Atrophy

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $482,066 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Spinal Muscular Atrophy is a devastating neuromuscular disease caused by insufficient amounts of SMN protein. SMA is caused by loss or mutation of the SMN1 gene and retention of the SMN2 gene. The SMN2 gene is a modifier of phenotype where milder SMA cases having more copies of SMN2. Rarely SMA patients have a missense mutation in the SMN1 gene. We can use these mutations and the protein domains they disrupt to study the function of the SMN protein. We have shown that SMA missense mutations are not functional by themselves but can function in the presence of some full-length wild-type SMN protein. Furthermore, we have shown that N and C-terminal SMN missense mutations can complement each other and rescue snRNP assembly in the complete absence of full-length wild-type SMN protein in mice. We have developed cell line that conditionally removes functional SMN to allow us test SMN missense mutations in culture. We have also used this cell line to test for suppressors of the SMNE134K mutation. We have identified a suppressor in the SmF protein that fully restores snRNP assembly lost due to the SMN E134K mutation. We now have a system to screen for suppressors of SMN missense mutations. In this proposal we will test the SmF suppressor we have found in two different SMN E134K mouse models and determine if this mutation rescues the SMA phenotype and survival of the SMA mouse. Thus, we can study the separate functions of SMN in snRNP assembly from the function of SMN in the axon. We will screen for additional suppressors using other SMN patient derived mutations to test other functional domains of SMN. We will investigate the role of SMN in the axon independent of Sm assembly by introducing HuD and truncated forms of SMN into the SMA mice via scAAV9. We have shown in cells that Smn exon2B is not required for cell survival. We will test scAAV9-Smn∆2 in SMA mice to confirm this finding and rescue the SMA phenotype. Finally we will test the role of profilin in axonal function in the SMA mouse using the SMNS230L mutation. Using genetic mutations we can dissect the functions of SMN in splicing and in the axon to resolve the underlying mechanism by which reduced SMN protein causes SMA.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10884302
Project number
5R01NS123736-04
Recipient
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
ARTHUR H. M. BURGHES
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$482,066
Award type
5
Project period
2021-07-01 → 2026-06-30