Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)

TIA1 is a gender-specific disease modifier of a mild mouse model of spinal muscular atrophy

  • Matthew D. Howell,
  • Eric W. Ottesen,
  • Natalia N. Singh,
  • Rachel L. Anderson,
  • Joonbae Seo,
  • Senthilkumar Sivanesan,
  • Elizabeth M. Whitley,
  • Ravindra N. Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07468-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by deletions or mutations of Survival Motor Neuron 1 (SMN1) gene. The nearly identical SMN2 cannot compensate for SMN1 loss due to exon 7 skipping. The allele C (C +/+) mouse recapitulates a mild SMA-like phenotype and offers an ideal system to monitor the role of disease-modifying factors over a long time. T-cell-restricted intracellular antigen 1 (TIA1) regulates SMN exon 7 splicing. TIA1 is reported to be downregulated in obese patients, although it is not known if the effect is gender-specific. We show that female Tia1-knockout (Tia1 −/−) mice gain significant body weight (BW) during early postnatal development. We next examined the effect of Tia1 deletion in novel C +/+/Tia1 −/− mice. Underscoring the opposing effects of Tia1 deletion and low SMN level on BW gain, both C +/+ and C +/+/Tia1 −/− females showed similar BW gain trajectory at all time points during our study. We observed early tail necrosis in C +/+/Tia1 −/− females but not in males. We show enhanced impairment of male reproductive organ development and exacerbation of the C +/+/Tia1 −/− testis transcriptome. Our findings implicate a protein factor as a gender-specific modifier of a mild mouse model of SMA.