News Release

Neural tissue contains imbalanced levels of proteins, U-M study finds

U-M researchers are one step closer to discovering why certain diseases affect specific organs

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Why do some diseases affect only specific organs, leaving others invulnerable? Researchers from the University of Michigan have found neural tissue contains imbalanced levels of proteins, which may explain the brain's susceptibility to a debilitating childhood movement disorder.

Known as DYT1 dystonia, the disease causes involuntary twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal postures. It's caused by a mutation in the DYT1 gene, which contains instructions for making the torsinA protein, causing this protein become defective. The defective protein causes disruption in an area of the brain that controls movement, leading to the abnormal movements.

"We want to understand why dystonia affects only brain cells in order to treat children," says William Dauer, M.D., Elinor Levine associate professor in the department of neurology at the University of Michigan.

Previously, Dauer and his colleagues used genetic engineering to create the same mutation in mouse DNA that causes the disease in humans. These mice had a neural specific defect similar to the brain-specific abnormality in human patients with dystonia.

The researchers used this mouse model to determine why neurons were affected, while the rest of the body was unaffected. They found that compared to nonneuronal cells, neurons have dramatically lower levels of torsinB, a sister protein that can work similarly to torsinA. When the DYT1 gene mutation causes a defect in torsinA, torsinB can take over its role in all other cells except for neuronal cells.

In fact, when Dauer and his colleagues experimentally reduced the amount of torsinB in skin cells with the DYT1 mutation, they developed abnormalities just like those found in neurons, says Dauer. "This could explain why one organ may be selectively affected in other diseases. The cells in that organ might lack proteins that help them to withstand certain genetic mutations or environmental insults."

"I compare this to populations—when during flu season only people with weakened immune systems get sick, while others don't. It's really quite simple," he says.

In order to treat dystonia, Dauer says further research will continue to discover the specific groups of movement-controlling neurons in the brain that are most affected by the defective torsinA protein.

Ultimately, research is needed to discover how to modulate the proteins in cells to protect the vulnerable cells from disease.

"The overall goal is to find treatment for this disease," Dauer says.

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Additional authors: Along with Dauer, Connie M. Kim, M.D., of Columbia University and Alex Perez, Guy Perkins, Ph.D., and Mark H. Ellisman, Ph.D., of the University of California.

Funding: This work was funded by the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation, the Bachmann Strauss Foundation, the Parkinson's Foundation and the National Institute of Health.

Journal reference:
Connie E. Kim, Alex Perez, Guy Perkins, Mark H. Ellisman, and William T. Dauer
A molecular mechanism underlying the neural-specific defect in torsinA mutant mice
PNAS 2010 107: 9861-9866.


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