Neurobiology of Disease (Dec 2005)

A role for both wild-type and expanded ataxin-7 in transcriptional regulation

  • Anna-Lena Ström,
  • Lars Forsgren,
  • Monica Holmberg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 3
pp. 646 – 655

Abstract

Read online

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7) is a neurodegenerative disease primarily affecting the brainstem, retina and Purkinje cells of the cerebellum. The disease is caused by a polyglutamine expansion in ataxin-7, a protein found in two complexes TFTC and STAGA, involved in transcriptional regulation. Transcriptional dysregulation has been implicated in the pathology of several polyglutamine diseases. In this paper, we analyzed the effect of both wild-type and expanded ataxin-7 on transcription driven by the co-activator CBP and the Purkinje cell expressed nuclear receptor RORα1. We could show that transcription mediated by both CBP and RORα1 was repressed by expanded ataxin-7. Interestingly, repression of transcription could also be observed with wild-type full-length ataxin-7, not only on CBP- and RORα1-mediated transcription, but also on basal transcription. The repression could be counteracted by inhibition of deacetylation, suggesting that ataxin-7 may act as a repressor of transcription by inhibiting the acetylation activity of TFTC and STAGA.

Keywords