Reference : Faithful SGCE imprinting in iPSC-derived cortical neurons: an endogenous cellular mod...
Scientific journals : Article
Life sciences : Biochemistry, biophysics & molecular biology
Systems Biomedicine
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/35490
Faithful SGCE imprinting in iPSC-derived cortical neurons: an endogenous cellular model of myoclonus-dystonia
English
Grütz, Karen []
Weisbach, Anne []
Lohmann, Katja []
Carlisle, FA []
Blake, Derek J []
Westenberger, Ana []
Klein, Christine []
Grünewald, Anne mailto [University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB) > >]
2017
Scientific Reports
Nature Publishing Group
Yes (verified by ORBilu)
International
2045-2322
London
United Kingdom
[en] Myoclonus dystonia ; ε-sarcoglycan ; iPSC-derived neurons
[en] In neuropathology research, induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons are considered a tool closely resembling the patient brain. Albeit in respect to epigenetics, this concept has been challenged. We generated iPSC-derived cortical neurons from myoclonus-dystonia patients with mutations (W100G and R102X) in the maternally imprinted ε-sarcoglycan (SGCE) gene and analysed properties such as imprinting, mRNA and protein expression. Comparison of the promoter during reprogramming and differentiation showed tissue-independent differential methylation. DNA sequencing with methylation-specific primers and cDNA analysis in patient neurons indicated selective expression of the mutated paternal SGCE allele. While fibroblasts only expressed the ubiquitous mRNA isoform, brain-specific SGCE mRNA and ε-sarcoglycan protein were detected in iPSC-derived control neurons. However, neuronal protein levels were reduced in both mutants. Our phenotypic characterization highlights the suitability of iPSC-derived cortical neurons with SGCE mutations for myoclonus-dystonia research and, in more general terms, prompts the use of iPSC-derived cellular models to study epigenetic mechanisms impacting on health and disease.
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Molecular and Functional Neurobiology (Grünewald Group)
DMRF
Researchers
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/35490
10.1038/srep41156
FnR ; FNR9631103 > Anne Grünewald > Model IPD > Modelling idiopathic Parkinson’s disease-associated somatic variation in dopaminergic neurons > 01/01/2016 > 31/12/2020 > 2015

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