Neurobiology of Disease (May 2023)

A human dynein heavy chain mutation impacts cortical progenitor cells causing developmental defects, reduced brain size and altered brain architecture

  • Delfina M. Romero,
  • Donia Zaidi,
  • Carmen Cifuentes-Diaz,
  • Camille Maillard,
  • Gael Grannec,
  • Mohammed Selloum,
  • Marie-Christine Birling,
  • Nadia Bahi-Buisson,
  • Fiona Francis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 180
p. 106085

Abstract

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Dynein heavy chain (DYNC1H1) mutations can either lead to severe cerebral cortical malformations, or alternatively may be associated with the development of spinal muscular atrophy with lower extremity predominance (SMA-LED). To assess the origin of such differences, we studied a new Dync1h1 knock-in mouse carrying the cortical malformation p.Lys3334Asn mutation. Comparing with an existing neurodegenerative Dync1h1 mutant (Legs at odd angles, Loa, p.Phe580Tyr/+), we assessed Dync1h1's roles in cortical progenitor and especially radial glia functions during embryogenesis, and assessed neuronal differentiation.p.Lys3334Asn /+ mice exhibit reduced brain and body size. Embryonic brains show increased and disorganized radial glia: interkinetic nuclear migration occurs in mutants, however there are increased basally positioned cells and abventricular mitoses. The ventricular boundary is disorganized potentially contributing to progenitor mislocalization and death. Morphologies of mitochondria and Golgi apparatus are perturbed in vitro, with different effects also in Loa mice. Perturbations of neuronal migration and layering are also observed in p.Lys3334Asn /+ mutants. Overall, we identify specific developmental effects due to a severe cortical malformation mutation in Dync1h1, highlighting the differences with a mutation known instead to primarily affect motor function.

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