iScience (Jul 2024)

Pleiotropic brain function of whirlin identified by a novel mutation

  • Carlos Aguilar,
  • Debbie Williams,
  • Ramakrishna Kurapati,
  • Rasneer S. Bains,
  • Philomena Mburu,
  • Andy Parker,
  • Jackie Williams,
  • Danilo Concas,
  • Hilda Tateossian,
  • Andrew R. Haynes,
  • Gareth Banks,
  • Pratik Vikhe,
  • Ines Heise,
  • Marie Hutchison,
  • Gemma Atkins,
  • Simon Gillard,
  • Becky Starbuck,
  • Simona Oliveri,
  • Andrew Blake,
  • Siddharth Sethi,
  • Saumya Kumar,
  • Tanaya Bardhan,
  • Jing-Yi Jeng,
  • Stuart L. Johnson,
  • Lara F. Corns,
  • Walter Marcotti,
  • Michelle Simon,
  • Sara Wells,
  • Paul K. Potter,
  • Heena V. Lad

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 7
p. 110170

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Despite some evidence indicating diverse roles of whirlin in neurons, the functional corollary of whirlin gene function and behavior has not been investigated or broadly characterized. A single nucleotide variant was identified from our recessive ENU-mutagenesis screen at a donor-splice site in whirlin, a protein critical for proper sensorineural hearing function. The mutation (head-bob, hb) led to partial intron-retention causing a frameshift and introducing a premature termination codon. Mutant mice had a head-bobbing phenotype and significant hyperactivity across several phenotyping tests. Lack of complementation of head-bob with whirler mutant mice confirmed the head-bob mutation as functionally distinct with compound mutants having a mild-moderate hearing defect. Utilizing transgenics, we demonstrate rescue of the hyperactive phenotype and combined with the expression profiling data conclude whirlin plays an essential role in activity-related behaviors. These results highlight a pleiotropic role of whirlin within the brain and implicate alternative, central mediated pathways in its function.

Keywords