ALS IMPLICATED PROTEIN TDP-43 SUSTAINS LEVELS OF STMN2 A MEDIATOR OF MOTOR NEURON GROWTH AND REPAIR
ALS IMPLICATED PROTEIN TDP-43 SUSTAINS LEVELS OF STMN2 A MEDIATOR OF MOTOR NEURON GROWTH AND REPAIR
Joseph R. Klim,Luis A. Williams,13 Authors,K. Eggan
Abstract
The findings that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients almost universally display pathological mislocalization of the RNA-binding protein TDP-43 and that mutations in its gene cause familial ALS have nominated altered RNA metabolism as a disease mechanism. However, the RNAs regulated by TDP-43 in motor neurons and their connection to neuropathy remain to be identified. Here we report transcripts whose abundances in human motor neurons are sensitive to TDP-43 depletion. Notably, expression of STMN2, which encodes a microtubule regulator, declined after TDP-43 knockdown and TDP-43 mislocalization as well as in patient-specific motor neurons and postmortem patient spinal cord. STMN2 loss upon reduced TDP-43 function was due to altered splicing, which is functionally important, as we show STMN2 is necessary for normal axonal outgrowth and regeneration. Notably, post-translational stabilization of STMN2 rescued neurite outgrowth and axon regeneration deficits induced by TDP-43 depletion. We propose that restoring STMN2 expression warrants examination as a therapeutic strategy for ALS. Klim et al. illuminate pathomechanisms of ALS using pluripotent stem cells to identify transcripts altered in human motor neurons by perturbations to ALS protein TDP-43, finding the microtubule regulator STMN2 highly sensitive to TDP-43 malfunctions.
