A Missense Change in the ATG4D Gene Links Aberrant Autophagy to a Neurodegenerative Vacuolar Storage Disease

Kaisa Kyöstilä(Institute of Genetics), Pernilla Syrjä(University of Helsinki), Vidhya Jagannathan(University of Bern), Gayathri Chandrasekar(Karolinska Institutet), Tarja S. Jokinen(University of Helsinki), Eija H. Seppälä(Institute of Genetics), Doreen Becker(University of Bern), Michaela Drögemüller(University of Bern), Elisabeth Dietschi(University of Bern), Cord Drögemüller(University of Bern), Johann Lang(University of Bern), Frank Steffen(University of Zurich), Cecilia Rohdin(Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences), Karin Hultin Jäderlund(Norwegian University of Life Sciences), Anu K. Lappalainen(University of Helsinki), Kerstin Hahn(University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation), Peter Wohlsein(University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation), Wolfgang Baumgärtner(University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation), Diana Henke(University of Bern), Anna Oevermann(University of Bern), Juha Kere(University of Helsinki), Hannes Lohi(Folkhälsans Forskningscentrum), Tosso Leeb(University of Bern)
PLoS Genetics
April 15, 2015
Cited by 54Open Access
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Abstract

Inherited neurodegenerative disorders are debilitating diseases that occur across different species. We have performed clinical, pathological and genetic studies to characterize a novel canine neurodegenerative disease present in the Lagotto Romagnolo dog breed. Affected dogs suffer from progressive cerebellar ataxia, sometimes accompanied by episodic nystagmus and behavioral changes. Histological examination revealed unique pathological changes, including profound neuronal cytoplasmic vacuolization in the nervous system, as well as spheroid formation and cytoplasmic aggregation of vacuoles in secretory epithelial tissues and mesenchymal cells. Genetic analyses uncovered a missense change, c.1288G>A; p.A430T, in the autophagy-related ATG4D gene on canine chromosome 20 with a highly significant disease association (p = 3.8 x 10-136) in a cohort of more than 2300 Lagotto Romagnolo dogs. ATG4D encodes a poorly characterized cysteine protease belonging to the macroautophagy pathway. Accordingly, our histological analyses indicated altered autophagic flux in affected tissues. The knockdown of the zebrafish homologue atg4da resulted in a widespread developmental disturbance and neurodegeneration in the central nervous system. Our study describes a previously unknown canine neurological disease with particular pathological features and implicates the ATG4D protein as an important autophagy mediator in neuronal homeostasis. The canine phenotype serves as a model to delineate the disease-causing pathological mechanism(s) and ATG4D function, and can also be used to explore treatment options. Furthermore, our results reveal a novel candidate gene for human neurodegeneration and enable the development of a genetic test for veterinary diagnostic and breeding purposes.


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