Autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA) is a group of heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorders. By positional cloning, we have identified the gene strongly associated with a form of degenerative ataxia (chromosome 16q22.1-linked ADCA) that clinically shows progressive pure cerebellar ataxia. Detailed examination by use of audiogram suggested that sensorineural hearing impairment may be associated with ataxia in our families. After restricting the candidate region in chromosome 16q22.1 by haplotype analysis, we found that all patients from 52 unrelated Japanese families harbor a heterozygous C-->T single-nucleotide substitution, 16 nt upstream of the putative translation initiation site of the gene for a hypothetical protein DKFZP434I216, which we have called "puratrophin-1" (Purkinje cell atrophy associated protein-1). The full-length puratrophin-1 mRNA had an open reading frame of 3,576 nt, predicted to contain important domains, including the spectrin repeat and the guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for Rho GTPases, followed by the Dbl-homologous domain, which indicates the role of puratrophin-1 in intracellular signaling and actin dynamics at the Golgi apparatus. Puratrophin-1--normally expressed in a wide range of cells, including epithelial hair cells in the cochlea--was aggregated in Purkinje cells of the chromosome 16q22.1-linked ADCA brains. Consistent with the protein prediction data of puratrophin-1, the Golgi-apparatus membrane protein and spectrin also formed aggregates in Purkinje cells. The present study highlights the importance of the 5' untranslated region (UTR) in identification of genes of human disease, suggests that a single-nucleotide substitution in the 5' UTR could be associated with protein aggregation, and indicates that the GEF protein is associated with cerebellar degeneration in humans.
Presented is the new kindred with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia linked to chromosome 16q22.1 (16q-ADCA type III) associated with progressive hearing loss. By haplotype analysis, the critical interval was slightly narrowed to three megabase regions between GATA01 and D16S3095. Neuropathologic study of 16q-ADCA type III demonstrated characteristic shrinkage of Purkinje cell bodies surrounded by synaptophysin-immunoreactive amorphous material containing calbindin- and ubiquitin-positive granules.
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NP-C) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the sequestration and trapping of endocytosed cholesterol in lysosomes. The NPC1 gene on chromosome 18 was recently identified but its physiological function remains unknown. We have studied the lipid compositions of cultured human NP-C fibroblasts and mouse SPM-3T3 cell line derived from the C57BL/KsJ NP-C model mouse, which belongs to the same complementation group. Fibroblasts derived from apparently normal age-matched individuals and a subline of SPM-3T3 cells which restores cholesterol metabolism by transfer of human chromosome 18 were used as controls. Levels of free cholesterol in whole cell homogenates increased about 1.5-fold in human NP-C fibroblasts and mouse SPM-3T3 cells, while in the plasma membrane, cholesterol content did not significantly change in NP-C fibroblasts but rather decreased in SPM-3T3 cells. The total phospholipid content did not significantly change; however, among phospholipid head groups, increases in sphingomyelin and decreases in other classes were observed in human NP-C fibroblasts and mouse SPM-3T3 cells. The ratios of saturated fatty acids to unsaturated fatty acids increased in both human and mouse cells. The increase was also confirmed in the plasma membrane fraction of SPM-3T3 cells. Membrane fluidity was examined using a 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH) fluorescent probe. The DPH anisotropy values were markedly increased in NP-C fibroblasts and in SPM-3T3 cells. The results suggest that a NP-C mutation causes complex alterations in cellular lipid contents and biophysical properties of the membrane.
Exteroceptive suppression of the masseter and temporalis muscles, produced by electrical stimulation of the mental nerve, was studied in 23 cases of Parkinson's disease (PD) and 20 age‐matched control subjects. Two components were usually observed: early (ES1) and late (ES2). ES2 was estimated in this study. The background electromyographic activity prior to the stimulation showed no difference between normal subjects and patients with PD. The latency of suppression in patients with PD was not different from that in normal subjects. The duration and the degree of suppression were lower in patients with PD when compared with the normal subjects. The reduction of exteroceptive suppression might, at least in part, play a role in the failure of motor control of the face in PD.
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