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Dive into the research topics where Laura P.W. Ranum is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura P.W. Ranum.


Nature Genetics | 1999

An untranslated CTG expansion causes a novel form of spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA8)

Michael D. Koob; Melinda L. Moseley; Lawrence J. Schut; Kellie A. Benzow; Bird Td; John W. Day; Laura P.W. Ranum

Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is the only disease reported to be caused by a CTG expansion. We now report that a non-coding CTG expansion causes a novel form of spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA8). This expansion, located on chromosome 13q21, was isolated directly from the genomic DNA of an ataxia patient by RAPID cloning. SCA8 patients have expansions similar in size (107-127 CTG repeats) to those found among adult-onset DM patients. SCA8 is the first example of a dominant SCA not caused by a CAG expansion translated as a polyglutamine tract.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Non-ATG-initiated translation directed by microsatellite expansions

Tao Zu; Brian B. Gibbens; Noelle S. Doty; Mário Gomes-Pereira; Aline Huguet; Matthew D. Stone; Jamie M. Margolis; Mark Peterson; Todd W. Markowski; Melissa Ingram; Zhenhong Nan; Colleen L. Forster; Walter C. Low; Benedikt Schoser; Nikunj V. Somia; H. Brent Clark; Stephen C. Schmechel; Peter B. Bitterman; Geneviève Gourdon; Maurice S. Swanson; Melinda L. Moseley; Laura P.W. Ranum

Trinucleotide expansions cause disease by both protein- and RNA-mediated mechanisms. Unexpectedly, we discovered that CAG expansion constructs express homopolymeric polyglutamine, polyalanine, and polyserine proteins in the absence of an ATG start codon. This repeat-associated non-ATG translation (RAN translation) occurs across long, hairpin-forming repeats in transfected cells or when expansion constructs are integrated into the genome in lentiviral-transduced cells and brains. Additionally, we show that RAN translation across human spinocerebellar ataxia type 8 (SCA8) and myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) CAG expansion transcripts results in the accumulation of SCA8 polyalanine and DM1 polyglutamine expansion proteins in previously established SCA8 and DM1 mouse models and human tissue. These results have implications for understanding fundamental mechanisms of gene expression. Moreover, these toxic, unexpected, homopolymeric proteins now should be considered in pathogenic models of microsatellite disorders.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Bidirectional expression of CUG and CAG expansion transcripts and intranuclear polyglutamine inclusions in spinocerebellar ataxia type 8

Melinda L. Moseley; Tao Zu; Yoshio Ikeda; Wangcai Gao; Anne K Mosemiller; Randy S. Daughters; Gang Chen; Marcy R Weatherspoon; H. Brent Clark; Timothy J. Ebner; John W. Day; Laura P.W. Ranum

We previously reported that a (CTG)n expansion causes spinocerebellar ataxia type 8 (SCA8), a slowly progressive ataxia with reduced penetrance. We now report a transgenic mouse model in which the full-length human SCA8 mutation is transcribed using its endogenous promoter. (CTG)116 expansion, but not (CTG)11 control lines, develop a progressive neurological phenotype with in vivo imaging showing reduced cerebellar-cortical inhibition. 1C2-positive intranuclear inclusions in cerebellar Purkinje and brainstem neurons in SCA8 expansion mice and human SCA8 autopsy tissue result from translation of a polyglutamine protein, encoded on a previously unidentified antiparallel transcript (ataxin 8, ATXN8 ) spanning the repeat in the CAG direction. The neurological phenotype in SCA8 BAC expansion but not BAC control lines demonstrates the pathogenicity of the (CTG-CAG)n expansion. Moreover, the expression of noncoding (CUG)n expansion transcripts (ataxin 8 opposite strand, ATXN8OS ) and the discovery of intranuclear polyglutamine inclusions suggests SCA8 pathogenesis involves toxic gain-of-function mechanisms at both the protein and RNA levels.


Neurology | 2003

Myotonic dystrophy type 2 Molecular, diagnostic and clinical spectrum

John W. Day; Kenneth Ricker; J. F. Jacobsen; L. J. Rasmussen; Katherine A. Dick; Wolfram Kress; C. Schneider; M. C. Koch; G. J. Beilman; Andrew R. Harrison; Joline Dalton; Laura P.W. Ranum

Background: Myotonic dystrophy types 1 (DM1) and 2 (DM2/proximal myotonic myopathy PROMM) are dominantly inherited disorders with unusual multisystemic clinical features. The authors have characterized the clinical and molecular features of DM2/PROMM, which is caused by a CCTG repeat expansion in intron 1 of the zinc finger protein 9 (ZNF9) gene. Methods: Three-hundred and seventy-nine individuals from 133 DM2/PROMM families were evaluated genetically, and in 234 individuals clinical and molecular features were compared. Results: Among affected individuals 90% had electrical myotonia, 82% weakness, 61% cataracts, 23% diabetes, and 19% cardiac involvement. Because of the repeat tract’s unprecedented size (mean ∼5,000 CCTGs) and somatic instability, expansions were detectable by Southern analysis in only 80% of known carriers. The authors developed a repeat assay that increased the molecular detection rate to 99%. Only 30% of the positive samples had single sizeable expansions by Southern analysis, and 70% showed multiple bands or smears. Among the 101 individuals with single expansions, repeat size did not correlate with age at disease onset. Affected offspring had markedly shorter expansions than their affected parents, with a mean size difference of −17 kb (−4,250 CCTGs). Conclusions: DM2 is present in a large number of families of northern European ancestry. Clinically, DM2 resembles adult-onset DM1, with myotonia, muscular dystrophy, cataracts, diabetes, testicular failure, hypogammaglobulinemia, and cardiac conduction defects. An important distinction is the lack of a congenital form of DM2. The clinical and molecular parallels between DM1 and DM2 indicate that the multisystemic features common to both diseases are caused by CUG or CCUG expansions expressed at the RNA level.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

RAN proteins and RNA foci from antisense transcripts in C9ORF72 ALS and frontotemporal dementia

Tao Zu; Yuanjing Liu; Monica Bañez-Coronel; Tammy Reid; Olga Pletnikova; Jada Lewis; Timothy M. Miller; Matthew B. Harms; Annet E. Falchook; S. H. Subramony; Lyle W. Ostrow; Jeffrey D. Rothstein; Juan C. Troncoso; Laura P.W. Ranum

Significance A GGGGCC expansion mutation located in intron 1 of chromosome 9 ORF 72 (C9ORF72) was recently described as a common cause of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD). We show that this single mutation results in the accumulation of sense and antisense RNA foci plus six expansion proteins expressed by repeat-associated non-ATG (RAN) translation. RNAs accumulate in nuclear foci and the RAN proteins form cytoplasmic aggregates in neurons that often cluster in affected brain regions. These results indicate that bidirectional transcription and RAN translation are fundamental pathologic features of C9ORF72 ALS/FTD. Additionally these data have broad implications that change our understanding of how microsatellite expansion mutations are expressed in patient cells and how they cause disease. The finding that a GGGGCC (G4C2) hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the chromosome 9 ORF 72 (C9ORF72) gene is a common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) links ALS/FTD to a large group of unstable microsatellite diseases. Previously, we showed that microsatellite expansion mutations can be bidirectionally transcribed and that these mutations express unexpected proteins by a unique mechanism, repeat-associated non-ATG (RAN) translation. In this study, we show that C9ORF72 antisense transcripts are elevated in the brains of C9ORF72 expansion-positive [C9(+)] patients, and antisense GGCCCC (G2C4) repeat-expansion RNAs accumulate in nuclear foci in brain. Additionally, sense and antisense foci accumulate in blood and are potential biomarkers of the disease. Furthermore, we show that RAN translation occurs from both sense and antisense expansion transcripts, resulting in the expression of six RAN proteins (antisense: Pro-Arg, Pro-Ala, Gly-Pro; and sense: Gly-Ala, Gly-Arg, Gly-Pro). These proteins accumulate in cytoplasmic aggregates in affected brain regions, including the frontal and motor cortex, hippocampus, and spinal cord neurons, with some brain regions showing dramatic RAN protein accumulation and clustering. The finding that unique antisense G2C4 RNA foci and three unique antisense RAN proteins accumulate in patient tissues indicates that bidirectional transcription of expanded alleles is a fundamental pathologic feature of C9ORF72 ALS/FTD. Additionally, these findings suggest the need to test therapeutic strategies that target both sense and antisense RNAs and RAN proteins in C9ORF72 ALS/FTD, and to more broadly consider the role of antisense expression and RAN translation across microsatellite expansion diseases.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Spectrin Mutations Cause Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 5

Yoshio Ikeda; Katherine A. Dick; Marcy R Weatherspoon; Dan Gincel; Karen R. Armbrust; Joline Dalton; Giovanni Stevanin; Alexandra Durr; Christine Zühlke; Katrin Bürk; H. Brent Clark; Alexis Brice; Jeffrey D. Rothstein; Lawrence J. Schut; John W. Day; Laura P.W. Ranum

We have discovered that β-III spectrin (SPTBN2) mutations cause spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 (SCA5) in an 11-generation American kindred descended from President Lincolns grandparents and two additional families. Two families have separate in-frame deletions of 39 and 15 bp, and a third family has a mutation in the actin/ARP1 binding region. β-III spectrin is highly expressed in Purkinje cells and has been shown to stabilize the glutamate transporter EAAT4 at the surface of the plasma membrane. We found marked differences in EAAT4 and GluRδ2 by protein blot and cell fractionation in SCA5 autopsy tissue. Cell culture studies demonstrate that wild-type but not mutant β-III spectrin stabilizes EAAT4 at the plasma membrane. Spectrin mutations are a previously unknown cause of ataxia and neurodegenerative disease that affect membrane proteins involved in glutamate signaling.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Genetic mapping of a second myotonic dystrophy locus.

Laura P.W. Ranum; Paul F. Rasmussen; Kellie A. Benzow; Michael D. Koob; John W. Day

We report the mapping of a second myotonic dystrophy locus, myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2). Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is a multi-system disease and the most common form of muscular dystrophy in adults. In 1992, DM was shown to be caused by an expanded CTG repeat in the 3´ untranslated region of the dystrophia myotonica-protein kinase gene (DMPK) on chromosome 19 (refs 2, 3, 4, 5, 6). Although several theories have been put forth to explain how the CTG expansion causes the broad spectrum of clinical features associated with DM, it is not understood how this mutation, which does not alter the protein-coding region of a gene, causes an affect at the cellular level. We have identified a five-generation family (MN1) with a genetically distinct form of myotonic dystrophy. Affected members exhibit remarkable clinical similarity to DM (myotonia, proximal and distal limb weakness, frontal balding, cataracts and cardiac arrhythmias) but do not have the chromosome-19 CTG expansion. We have mapped the disease locus (DM2) of the MN1 family to a 10-cM region of chromosome 3q. Understanding the common molecular features of two different forms of the disease should shed light on the mechanisms responsible for the broad constellation of seemingly unrelated clinical features present in both diseases.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

RNA Gain-of-Function in Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 8

Randy S. Daughters; Daniel L. Tuttle; Wangcai Gao; Yoshio Ikeda; Melinda L. Moseley; Timothy J. Ebner; Maurice S. Swanson; Laura P.W. Ranum

Microsatellite expansions cause a number of dominantly-inherited neurological diseases. Expansions in coding-regions cause protein gain-of-function effects, while non-coding expansions produce toxic RNAs that alter RNA splicing activities of MBNL and CELF proteins. Bi-directional expression of the spinocerebellar ataxia type 8 (SCA8) CTG CAG expansion produces CUG expansion RNAs (CUGexp) from the ATXN8OS gene and a nearly pure polyglutamine expansion protein encoded by ATXN8 CAGexp transcripts expressed in the opposite direction. Here, we present three lines of evidence that RNA gain-of-function plays a significant role in SCA8: 1) CUGexp transcripts accumulate as ribonuclear inclusions that co-localize with MBNL1 in selected neurons in the brain; 2) loss of Mbnl1 enhances motor deficits in SCA8 mice; 3) SCA8 CUGexp transcripts trigger splicing changes and increased expression of the CUGBP1-MBNL1 regulated CNS target, GABA-A transporter 4 (GAT4/Gabt4). In vivo optical imaging studies in SCA8 mice confirm that Gabt4 upregulation is associated with the predicted loss of GABAergic inhibition within the granular cell layer. These data demonstrate that CUGexp transcripts dysregulate MBNL/CELF regulated pathways in the brain and provide mechanistic insight into the CNS effects of other CUGexp disorders. Moreover, our demonstration that relatively short CUGexp transcripts cause RNA gain-of-function effects and the growing number of antisense transcripts recently reported in mammalian genomes suggest unrecognized toxic RNAs contribute to the pathophysiology of polyglutamine CAG CTG disorders.


Neurology | 1998

Incidence of dominant spinocerebellar and Friedreich triplet repeats among 361 ataxia families

Melinda L. Moseley; Kellie A. Benzow; L J Schut; Thomas D Bird; Carlos M. Gomez; Paul E. Barkhaus; Karen Blindauer; Malgorzata Labuda; Massimo Pandolfo; M D Koob; Laura P.W. Ranum

Objective: To determine the incidence of spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) types 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7 and Friedreichs ataxia (FA) among a large panel of ataxia families. Background: The ataxias are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative diseases that variably affect the cerebellum, brainstem, and spinocerebellar tracts. Trinucleotide repeat expansions have been shown to be the mutational mechanism for five dominantly inherited SCAs as well as FA. Methods: We collected DNA samples and clinical data from patients representing 361 families with adult-onset ataxia of unknown etiology. Patients with a clinical diagnosis of FA were specifically excluded from our collection. Results: Among the 178 dominant kindreds, we found SCA1 expansion at a frequency of 5.6%, SCA2 expansion at a frequency of 15.2%, SCA3 expansion at a frequency of 20.8%, SCA6 expansion at a frequency of 15.2%, and SCA7 expansion at a frequency of 4.5%. FA alleles were found in 11.4% of apparently recessive and 5.2% of apparently sporadic patients. Among these patients the repeat sizes for one or both FA alleles were relatively small, with sizes for the smaller allele ranging from 90 to 600 GAA repeats. The clinical presentation for these patients is atypical for FA, with one or more of the following characteristics: adult onset of disease, retained tendon reflexes, normal plantar response, and intact or partially intact sensory perceptions. Conclusions: Pathogenic trinucleotide repeat expansions were found among 61% of the dominant kindreds. Among patients with apparently recessive or negative family histories of ataxia, 6.8% and 4.4% tested positive for a CAG expansion at one of the dominant loci, and 11.4 and 5.2% of patients with apparently recessive or sporadic forms of ataxia had FA expansions. Because of the significant implications that a dominant versus recessive inheritance pattern has for future generations, it is important to screen patients who do not have a clearly dominant inheritance pattern for expansions at both the FA and the dominant ataxia loci.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2005

RNA pathogenesis of the myotonic dystrophies

John W. Day; Laura P.W. Ranum

Myotonic dystrophy (dystrophia myotonica, DM) is the most common form of muscular dystrophy in adults. The presence of two genetic forms of this complex multisystemic disease (DM1 and DM2) was unrecognized until the genetic cause of DM1 was identified in 1992. The fact that the DM1 mutation is an untranslated CTG expansion led to extended controversy about the molecular pathophysiology of this disease. When the DM2 mutation was identified in 2001 as being a similarly untranslated CCTG expansion, the molecular and clinical parallels between DM1 and DM2 substantiated the role of a novel mechanism in generating the unusual constellation of clinical features seen in these diseases: the repeat expansions expressed at the RNA level alter RNA processing, at least in part by interfering with alternative splicing of other genes. For example, in both DM1 and DM2, altered splicing of chloride channel and insulin receptor transcripts leads to myotonia and insulin resistance, respectively. Although other mechanisms may underlie the differences between DM1 and DM2, the pathogenic effects of the RNA mechanism are now clear, which will facilitate development of appropriate treatments.

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Tao Zu

University of Florida

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Harry T. Orr

University of Minnesota

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Huda Y. Zoghbi

National Institutes of Health

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