Searched for: in-biosketch:yes
person:tiang01
Mutations in TUBB8 cause a multiplicity of phenotypes in human oocytes and early embryos
Feng, Ruizhi; Yan, Zheng; Li, Bin; Yu, Min; Sang, Qing; Tian, Guoling; Xu, Yao; Chen, Biaobang; Qu, Ronggui; Sun, Zhaogui; Sun, Xiaoxi; Jin, Li; He, Lin; Kuang, Yanping; Cowan, Nicholas J; Wang, Lei
BACKGROUND: TUBB8 is a primate-specific beta-tubulin isotype whose expression is confined to oocytes and the early embryo. We previously found that mutations in TUBB8 caused oocyte maturation arrest. The objective was to describe newly discovered mutations in TUBB8 and to characterise the accompanying spectrum of phenotypes and modes of inheritance. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients with oocyte maturation arrest were sequenced with respect to TUBB8. We investigated the effects of identified mutations in vitro, in cultured cells and in mouse oocytes. Seven heterozygous missense and two homozygous mutations were identified. These mutations cause a range of folding defects in vitro, different degrees of microtubule disruption upon expression in cultured cells and interfere to varying extents in the proper assembly of the meiotic spindle in mouse oocytes. Several of the newly discovered TUBB8 mutations result in phenotypic variability. For example, oocytes harbouring any of three missense mutations (I210V, T238M and N348S) could extrude the first polar body. Moreover, they could be fertilised, although the ensuing embryos became developmentally arrested. Surprisingly, oocytes from patients harbouring homozygous TUBB8 mutations that in either case preclude the expression of a functional TUBB8 polypeptide nonetheless contained identifiable spindles. CONCLUSIONS: Our data substantially expand the range of dysfunctional oocyte phenotypes incurred by mutation in TUBB8, underscore the independent nature of human oocyte meiosis and differentiation, extend the class of genetic diseases known as the tubulinopathies and provide new criteria for the qualitative evaluation of meiosis II (MII) oocytes for in vitro fertilization (IVF).
PMCID:5035199
PMID: 27273344
ISSN: 1468-6244
CID: 2261452
Mutations in TUBB8 and Human Oocyte Meiotic Arrest
Feng, Ruizhi; Sang, Qing; Kuang, Yanping; Sun, Xiaoxi; Yan, Zheng; Zhang, Shaozhen; Shi, Juanzi; Tian, Guoling; Luchniak, Anna; Fukuda, Yusuke; Li, Bin; Yu, Min; Chen, Junling; Xu, Yao; Guo, Luo; Qu, Ronggui; Wang, Xueqian; Sun, Zhaogui; Liu, Miao; Shi, Huijuan; Wang, Hongyan; Feng, Yi; Shao, Ruijin; Chai, Renjie; Li, Qiaoli; Xing, Qinghe; Zhang, Rui; Nogales, Eva; Jin, Li; He, Lin; Gupta, Mohan L Jr; Cowan, Nicholas J; Wang, Lei
Background Human reproduction depends on the fusion of a mature oocyte with a sperm cell to form a fertilized egg. The genetic events that lead to the arrest of human oocyte maturation are unknown. Methods We sequenced the exomes of five members of a four-generation family, three of whom had infertility due to oocyte meiosis I arrest. We performed Sanger sequencing of a candidate gene, TUBB8, in DNA samples from these members, additional family members, and members of 23 other affected families. The expression of TUBB8 and all other beta-tubulin isotypes was assessed in human oocytes, early embryos, sperm cells, and several somatic tissues by means of a quantitative reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction assay. We evaluated the effect of the TUBB8 mutations on the assembly of the heterodimer consisting of one alpha-tubulin polypeptide and one beta-tubulin polypeptide (alpha/beta-tubulin heterodimer) in vitro, on microtubule architecture in HeLa cells, on microtubule dynamics in yeast cells, and on spindle assembly in mouse and human oocytes. Results We identified seven mutations in the primate-specific gene TUBB8 that were responsible for oocyte meiosis I arrest in 7 of the 24 families. TUBB8 expression is unique to oocytes and the early embryo, in which this gene accounts for almost all the expressed beta-tubulin. The mutations affect chaperone-dependent folding and assembly of the alpha/beta-tubulin heterodimer, disrupt microtubule behavior on expression in cultured cells, alter microtubule dynamics in vivo, and cause catastrophic spindle-assembly defects and maturation arrest on expression in mouse and human oocytes. Conclusions TUBB8 mutations have dominant-negative effects that disrupt microtubule behavior and oocyte meiotic spindle assembly and maturation, causing female infertility. (Funded by the National Basic Research Program of China and others.).
PMCID:4767273
PMID: 26789871
ISSN: 1533-4406
CID: 1921572
Mutations in Either TUBB or MAPRE2 Cause Circumferential Skin Creases Kunze Type
Isrie, Mala; Breuss, Martin; Tian, Guoling; Hansen, Andi Harley; Cristofoli, Francesca; Morandell, Jasmin; Kupchinsky, Zachari A; Sifrim, Alejandro; Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Celia Maria; Dapena, Elena Porta; Doonanco, Kurston; Leonard, Norma; Tinsa, Faten; Moortgat, Stephanie; Ulucan, Hakan; Koparir, Erkan; Karaca, Ender; Katsanis, Nicholas; Marton, Valeria; Vermeesch, Joris Robert; Davis, Erica E; Cowan, Nicholas J; Keays, David Anthony; Van Esch, Hilde
Circumferential skin creases Kunze type (CSC-KT) is a specific congenital entity with an unknown genetic cause. The disease phenotype comprises characteristic circumferential skin creases accompanied by intellectual disability, a cleft palate, short stature, and dysmorphic features. Here, we report that mutations in either MAPRE2 or TUBB underlie the genetic origin of this syndrome. MAPRE2 encodes a member of the microtubule end-binding family of proteins that bind to the guanosine triphosphate cap at growing microtubule plus ends, and TUBB encodes a beta-tubulin isotype that is expressed abundantly in the developing brain. Functional analyses of the TUBB mutants show multiple defects in the chaperone-dependent tubulin heterodimer folding and assembly pathway that leads to a compromised yield of native heterodimers. The TUBB mutations also have an impact on microtubule dynamics. For MAPRE2, we show that the mutations result in enhanced MAPRE2 binding to microtubules, implying an increased dwell time at microtubule plus ends. Further, in vivo analysis of MAPRE2 mutations in a zebrafish model of craniofacial development shows that the variants most likely perturb the patterning of branchial arches, either through excessive activity (under a recessive paradigm) or through haploinsufficiency (dominant de novo paradigm). Taken together, our data add CSC-KT to the growing list of tubulinopathies and highlight how multiple inheritance paradigms can affect dosage-sensitive biological systems so as to result in the same clinical defect.
PMCID:4678434
PMID: 26637975
ISSN: 1537-6605
CID: 1869572
Mutations in TUBG1, DYNC1H1, KIF5C and KIF2A cause malformations of cortical development and microcephaly
Poirier, Karine; Lebrun, Nicolas; Broix, Loic; Tian, Guoling; Saillour, Yoann; Boscheron, Cecile; Parrini, Elena; Valence, Stephanie; Pierre, Benjamin Saint; Oger, Madison; Lacombe, Didier; Genevieve, David; Fontana, Elena; Darra, Franscesca; Cances, Claude; Barth, Magalie; Bonneau, Dominique; Bernadina, Bernardo Dalla; N'guyen, Sylvie; Gitiaux, Cyril; Parent, Philippe; des Portes, Vincent; Pedespan, Jean Michel; Legrez, Victoire; Castelnau-Ptakine, Laetitia; Nitschke, Patrick; Hieu, Thierry; Masson, Cecile; Zelenika, Diana; Andrieux, Annie; Francis, Fiona; Guerrini, Renzo; Cowan, Nicholas J; Bahi-Buisson, Nadia; Chelly, Jamel
The genetic causes of malformations of cortical development (MCD) remain largely unknown. Here we report the discovery of multiple pathogenic missense mutations in TUBG1, DYNC1H1 and KIF2A, as well as a single germline mosaic mutation in KIF5C, in subjects with MCD. We found a frequent recurrence of mutations in DYNC1H1, implying that this gene is a major locus for unexplained MCD. We further show that the mutations in KIF5C, KIF2A and DYNC1H1 affect ATP hydrolysis, productive protein folding and microtubule binding, respectively. In addition, we show that suppression of mouse Tubg1 expression in vivo interferes with proper neuronal migration, whereas expression of altered gamma-tubulin proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae disrupts normal microtubule behavior. Our data reinforce the importance of centrosomal and microtubule-related proteins in cortical development and strongly suggest that microtubule-dependent mitotic and postmitotic processes are major contributors to the pathogenesis of MCD.
PMCID:3826256
PMID: 23603762
ISSN: 1061-4036
CID: 394952
Tubulin-Specific Chaperones: Components of a Molecular Machine That Assembles the alpha/beta Heterodimer
Tian, Guoling; Cowan, Nicholas J
The tubulin heterodimer consists of one alpha- and one beta-tubulin polypeptide. Neither protein can partition to the native state or assemble into polymerization competent heterodimers without the concerted action of a series of chaperone proteins including five tubulin-specific chaperones (TBCs) termed TBCA-TBCE. TBCA and TBCB bind to and stabilize newly synthesized quasi-native beta- and alpha-tubulin polypeptides, respectively, following their generation via multiple rounds of ATP-dependent interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin. There is free exchange of beta-tubulin between TBCA and TBCD, and of alpha-tubulin between TBCB and TBCE, resulting in the formation of TBCD/beta and TBCE/alpha, respectively. The latter two complexes interact, forming a supercomplex (TBCE/alpha/TBCD/beta). Discharge of the native alpha/beta heterodimer occurs via interaction of the supercomplex with TBCC, which results in the triggering of TBC-bound beta-tubulin (E-site) GTP hydrolysis. This reaction acts as a switch for disassembly of the supercomplex and the release of E-site GDP-bound heterodimer, which becomes polymerization competent following spontaneous exchange with GTP. The tubulin-specific chaperones thus function together as a tubulin assembly machine, marrying the alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits into a tightly associated heterodimer. The existence of this evolutionarily conserved pathway explains why it has never proved possible to isolate alpha- or beta-tubulin as stable independent entities in the absence of their cognate partners, and implies that each exists and is maintained in the heterodimer in a nonminimal energy state. Here, we describe methods for the purification of recombinant TBCs as biologically active proteins following their expression in a variety of host/vector systems.
PMCID:4961357
PMID: 23973072
ISSN: 0091-679x
CID: 512962
Mutations in the beta-tubulin gene TUBB5 cause microcephaly with structural brain abnormalities
Breuss, Martin; Heng, Julian Ik-Tsen; Poirier, Karine; Tian, Guoling; Jaglin, Xavier Hubert; Qu, Zhengdong; Braun, Andreas; Gstrein, Thomas; Ngo, Linh; Haas, Matilda; Bahi-Buisson, Nadia; Moutard, Marie-Laure; Passemard, Sandrine; Verloes, Alain; Gressens, Pierre; Xie, Yunli; Robson, Kathryn J H; Rani, Deepa Selvi; Thangaraj, Kumarasamy; Clausen, Tim; Chelly, Jamel; Cowan, Nicholas Justin; Keays, David Anthony
The formation of the mammalian cortex requires the generation, migration, and differentiation of neurons. The vital role that the microtubule cytoskeleton plays in these cellular processes is reflected by the discovery that mutations in various tubulin isotypes cause different neurodevelopmental diseases, including lissencephaly (TUBA1A), polymicrogyria (TUBA1A, TUBB2B, TUBB3), and an ocular motility disorder (TUBB3). Here, we show that Tubb5 is expressed in neurogenic progenitors in the mouse and that its depletion in vivo perturbs the cell cycle of progenitors and alters the position of migrating neurons. We report the occurrence of three microcephalic patients with structural brain abnormalities harboring de novo mutations in TUBB5 (M299V, V353I, and E401K). These mutant proteins, which affect the chaperone-dependent assembly of tubulin heterodimers in different ways, disrupt neurogenic division and/or migration in vivo. Our results provide insight into the functional repertoire of the tubulin gene family, specifically implicating TUBB5 in embryonic neurogenesis and microcephaly.
PMCID:3595605
PMID: 23246003
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 249192
Effect of TBCD and its regulatory interactor Arl2 on tubulin and microtubule integrity
Tian, Guoling; Thomas, Simi; Cowan, Nicholas J
Assembly of the alpha/beta tubulin heterodimer requires the participation of a series of chaperone proteins (TBCA-E) that function downstream of the cytosolic chaperonin (CCT) as a heterodimer assembly machine. TBCD and TBCE are also capable of acting in a reverse reaction in which they disrupt native heterodimers. Homologs of TBCA-E exist in all eukaryotes, and the amino acid sequences of alpha- and beta-tubulin isotypes are rigidly conserved among vertebrates. However, the efficiency with which TBCD effects tubulin disruption in vivo depends on its origin: bovine (but not human) TBCD efficiently destroys tubulin and microtubules upon overexpression in cultured cells. Here we show that recombinant bovine TBCD is produced in HeLa cells as a stoichiometric cocomplex with beta-tubulin, consistent with its behavior in vitro and in vivo. In contrast, expression of human TBCD using the same host/vector system results in the generation of TBCD that is not complexed with beta-tubulin. We show that recombinant human TBCD functions indistinguishably from its nonrecombinant bovine counterpart in in vitro CCT-driven folding reactions, in tubulin disruption reactions, and in tubulin GTPase activating protein assays in which TBCD and TBCC stimulate GTP hydrolysis by beta-tubulin at a heterodimer concentration far below that required for polymerization into microtubules. We conclude that bovine and human TBCD have functionally identical roles in de novo tubulin heterodimer assembly, and show that the inability of human TBCD to disrupt microtubule integrity upon overexpression in vivo can be overcome by siRNA-mediated suppression of expression of the TBCD regulator Arl2 (ADP ribosylation factor-like protein). (c) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc
PMCID:2958230
PMID: 20740604
ISSN: 1949-3592
CID: 113945
Disease-associated mutations in TUBA1A result in a spectrum of defects in the tubulin folding and heterodimer assembly pathway
Tian, Guoling; Jaglin, Xavier H; Keays, David A; Francis, Fiona; Chelly, Jamel; Cowan, Nicholas J
Malformations of cortical development are characteristic of a plethora of diseases that includes polymicrogyria, periventricular and subcortical heterotopia and lissencephaly. Mutations in TUBA1A and TUBB2B, each a member of the multigene families that encode alpha- and beta-tubulins, have recently been implicated in these diseases. Here we examine the defects that result from nine disease-causing mutations (I188L, I238V, P263T, L286F, V303G, L397P, R402C, 402H, S419L) in TUBA1A. We show that the expression of all the mutant proteins in vitro results in the generation of tubulin heterodimers in varying yield and that these can co-polymerize with microtubules in vitro. We identify several kinds of defects that result from these mutations. Among these are various defects in the chaperone-dependent pathway leading to de novo tubulin heterodimer formation. These include a defective interaction with the chaperone prefoldin, a reduced efficiency in the generation of productive folding intermediates as a result of inefficient interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin, CCT, and, in several cases, a failure to stably interact with TBCB, one of five tubulin-specific chaperones that act downstream of CCT in the tubulin heterodimer assembly pathway. Other defects include structural instability in vitro, diminished stability in vivo, a compromised ability to co-assemble with microtubules in vivo and a suppression of microtubule growth rate in the neurites (but not the soma) of cultured neurons. Our data are consistent with the notion that some mutations in TUBA1A result in tubulin deficit, whereas others reflect compromised interactions with one or more MAPs that are essential to proper neuronal migration
PMCID:2928131
PMID: 20603323
ISSN: 1460-2083
CID: 112037
Mutations in the beta-tubulin gene TUBB2B result in asymmetrical polymicrogyria
Jaglin, Xavier Hubert; Poirier, Karine; Saillour, Yoann; Buhler, Emmanuelle; Tian, Guoling; Bahi-Buisson, Nadia; Fallet-Bianco, Catherine; Phan-Dinh-Tuy, Francoise; Kong, Xiang Peng; Bomont, Pascale; Castelnau-Ptakhine, Laetitia; Odent, Sylvie; Loget, Philippe; Kossorotoff, Manoelle; Snoeck, Irina; Plessis, Ghislaine; Parent, Philippe; Beldjord, Cherif; Cardoso, Carlos; Represa, Alfonso; Flint, Jonathan; Keays, David Anthony; Cowan, Nicholas Justin; Chelly, Jamel
Polymicrogyria is a relatively common but poorly understood defect of cortical development characterized by numerous small gyri and a thick disorganized cortical plate lacking normal lamination. Here we report de novo mutations in a beta-tubulin gene, TUBB2B, in four individuals and a 27-gestational-week fetus with bilateral asymmetrical polymicrogyria. Neuropathological examination of the fetus revealed an absence of cortical lamination associated with the presence of ectopic neuronal cells in the white matter and in the leptomeningeal spaces due to breaches in the pial basement membrane. In utero RNAi-based inactivation demonstrates that TUBB2B is required for neuronal migration. We also show that two disease-associated mutations lead to impaired formation of tubulin heterodimers. These observations, together with previous data, show that disruption of microtubule-based processes underlies a large spectrum of neuronal migration disorders that includes not only lissencephaly and pachygyria, but also polymicrogyria malformations
PMCID:2883584
PMID: 19465910
ISSN: 1546-1718
CID: 135247
A Pachygyria-causing {alpha}-Tubulin Mutation Results in Inefficient Cycling with CCT and a Deficient Interaction with TBCB
Tian, Guoling; Kong, Xiang-Peng; Jaglin, Xavier H; Chelly, Jamel; Keays, David; Cowan, Nicholas J
The agyria (lissencephaly)/pachygyria phenotypes are catastrophic developmental diseases characterized by abnormal folds on the surface of the brain and disorganized cortical layering. In addition to mutations in at least four genes-LIS1, DCX, ARX and RELN-mutations in a human alpha-tubulin gene, TUBA1A, have recently been identified that cause these diseases. Here, we show that one such mutation, R264C, leads to a diminished capacity of de novo tubulin heterodimer formation. We identify the mechanisms that contribute to this defect. First, there is a reduced efficiency whereby quasinative alpha-tubulin folding intermediates are generated via ATP-dependent interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin CCT. Second, there is a failure of CCT-generated folding intermediates to stably interact with TBCB, one of the five tubulin chaperones (TBCA-E) that participate in the pathway leading to the de novo assembly of the tubulin heterodimer. We describe the behavior of the R264C mutation in terms of its effect on the structural integrity of alpha-tubulin and its interaction with TBCB. In spite of its compromised folding efficiency, R264C molecules that do productively assemble into heterodimers are capable of copolymerizing into dynamic microtubules in vivo. The diminished production of TUBA1A tubulin in R264C individuals is consistent with haploinsufficiency as a cause of the disease phenotype
PMCID:2262973
PMID: 18199681
ISSN: 1059-1524
CID: 78375