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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

2019 · DOI: 10.1038/s41593-018-0300-4
Nature Neuroscience · 461 Citations

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.