The autophagy gene<i>Wdr45/Wipi4</i>regulates learning and memory function and axonal homeostasis

Yan Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Le Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guangyan Miao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Cuicui Ji(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hongyu Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huayu Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lin Miao(National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing), Saori R. Yoshii(The University of Tokyo), Noboru Mizushima(The University of Tokyo), Xiaoqun Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hong Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Autophagy
May 22, 2015
Cited by 147Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

WDR45/WIPI4, encoding a WD40 repeat-containing PtdIns(3)P binding protein, is essential for the basal autophagy pathway. Mutations in WDR45 cause the neurodegenerative disease β-propeller protein-associated neurodegeneration (BPAN), a subtype of NBIA. We generated CNS-specific Wdr45 knockout mice, which exhibit poor motor coordination, greatly impaired learning and memory, and extensive axon swelling with numerous axon spheroids. Autophagic flux is defective and SQSTM1 (sequestosome-1)/p62 and ubiquitin-positive protein aggregates accumulate in neurons and swollen axons. Nes-Wdr45(fl/Y) mice recapitulate some hallmarks of BPAN, including cognitive impairment and defective axonal homeostasis, providing a model for revealing the disease pathogenesis of BPAN and also for investigating the possible role of autophagy in axon maintenance.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis