Mis-spliced transcripts generate de novo proteins in TDP-43–related ALS/FTD

Sahba Seddighi(National Institutes of Health), Yue Qi(National Institutes of Health), Anna‐Leigh Brown(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Oscar G. Wilkins(The Francis Crick Institute), Colleen Bereda(National Institutes of Health), Cédric Belair(National Institutes of Health), Yong‐Jie Zhang(Jacksonville College), Mercedes Prudencio(Jacksonville College), Matthew J. Keuss(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Aditya J Khandeshi(National Institutes of Health), Sarah Pickles(Jacksonville College), Sarah E. Hill(National Institutes of Health), James Hawrot(National Institutes of Health), Daniel M. Ramos(National Institutes of Health), Hebao Yuan(National Institutes of Health), Jessica P. Roberts(National Institutes of Health), Erika Kelmer Sacramento(Leibniz Institute on Aging - Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI)), Syed Islamuddin Shah, Mike A. Nalls(National Institutes of Health), J Colon(National Institutes of Health), Joel F. Reyes(National Institutes of Health), Veronica H. Ryan(National Institutes of Health), Matthew P. Nelson(National Institutes of Health), Casey Cook(Jacksonville College), Ziyi Li(National Institutes of Health), Laurel A. Screven(National Institutes of Health), Justin Kwan(National Institutes of Health), Puja R. Mehta(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Matteo Zanovello(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Martina Hallegger(King's College London), Anantharaman Shantaraman(Emory University), Lingyan Ping(Emory University), Yuka Koike(Jacksonville College), Björn Oskarsson(Jacksonville College), Nathan P. Staff(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Duc M. Duong(Emory University), Aisha Ahmed(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Maria Secrier(Institute of Genetics and Cancer), Jernej Ule(King's College London), Steven Jacobson(National Institutes of Health), Daniel S. Reich(National Institutes of Health), Jonathan D. Rohrer(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Andrea Malaspina(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Dennis W. Dickson(Jacksonville College), Jonathan D. Glass(Emory University), Alessandro Ori‬‬(Leibniz Institute on Aging - Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI)), Nicholas T. Seyfried(Emory University), Manolis Maragkakis(National Institutes of Health), Leonard Petrucelli(Jacksonville College), Pietro Fratta(The Francis Crick Institute), Michael E. Ward(National Institutes of Health)
Science Translational Medicine
January 26, 2024
Cited by 155Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Functional loss of TDP-43, an RNA binding protein genetically and pathologically linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), leads to the inclusion of cryptic exons in hundreds of transcripts during disease. Cryptic exons can promote the degradation of affected transcripts, deleteriously altering cellular function through loss-of-function mechanisms. Here, we show that mRNA transcripts harboring cryptic exons generated de novo proteins in TDP-43-depleted human iPSC-derived neurons in vitro, and de novo peptides were found in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from patients with ALS or FTD. Using coordinated transcriptomic and proteomic studies of TDP-43-depleted human iPSC-derived neurons, we identified 65 peptides that mapped to 12 cryptic exons. Cryptic exons identified in TDP-43-depleted human iPSC-derived neurons were predictive of cryptic exons expressed in postmortem brain tissue from patients with TDP-43 proteinopathy. These cryptic exons produced transcript variants that generated de novo proteins. We found that the inclusion of cryptic peptide sequences in proteins altered their interactions with other proteins, thereby likely altering their function. Last, we showed that 18 de novo peptides across 13 genes were present in CSF samples from patients with ALS/FTD spectrum disorders. The demonstration of cryptic exon translation suggests new mechanisms for ALS/FTD pathophysiology downstream of TDP-43 dysfunction and may provide a potential strategy to assay TDP-43 function in patient CSF.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis