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1.
Nat Genet ; 56(3): 395-407, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38429495

In digenic inheritance, pathogenic variants in two genes must be inherited together to cause disease. Only very few examples of digenic inheritance have been described in the neuromuscular disease field. Here we show that predicted deleterious variants in SRPK3, encoding the X-linked serine/argenine protein kinase 3, lead to a progressive early onset skeletal muscle myopathy only when in combination with heterozygous variants in the TTN gene. The co-occurrence of predicted deleterious SRPK3/TTN variants was not seen among 76,702 healthy male individuals, and statistical modeling strongly supported digenic inheritance as the best-fitting model. Furthermore, double-mutant zebrafish (srpk3-/-; ttn.1+/-) replicated the myopathic phenotype and showed myofibrillar disorganization. Transcriptome data suggest that the interaction of srpk3 and ttn.1 in zebrafish occurs at a post-transcriptional level. We propose that digenic inheritance of deleterious changes impacting both the protein kinase SRPK3 and the giant muscle protein titin causes a skeletal myopathy and might serve as a model for other genetic diseases.


Muscular Diseases , Zebrafish , Animals , Humans , Male , Connectin/genetics , Connectin/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal , Muscular Diseases/genetics , Muscular Diseases/metabolism , Muscular Diseases/pathology , Mutation , Zebrafish/genetics
2.
Chemistry ; 27(34): 8714-8722, 2021 Jun 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33830552

The separation and isolation of many of the platinum group metals (PGMs) is currently achieved commercially using solvent extraction processes. The extraction of rhodium is problematic however, as a variety of complexes of the form [RhCln (H2 O)6-n ](n-3)- are found in hydrochloric acid, making it difficult to design a reagent that can extract all the rhodium. In this work, the synergistic combination of a primary amine (2-ethylhexylamine, LA ) with a primary amide (3,5,5-trimethylhexanamide, L1 ) is shown to extract over 85 % of rhodium from 4 M hydrochloric acid. Two rhodium complexes are shown to reside in the organic phase, the ion-pair [HLA ]3 [RhCl6 ] and the amide complex [HLA ]2 [RhCl5 (L1 )]; in the latter complex, the amide is tautomerized to its enol form and coordinated to the rhodium centre through the nitrogen atom. This insight highlights the need for ligands that target specific metal complexes in the aqueous phase and provides an efficient synergistic solution for the solvent extraction of rhodium.


Rhodium , Amides , Amines , Hydrochloric Acid , Solvents
3.
Neurobiol Aging ; 35(10): 2382-93, 2014 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24906892

Axon degeneration precedes cell body death in many age-related neurodegenerative disorders, often determining symptom onset and progression. A sensitive method for revealing axon pathology could indicate whether this is the case also in Huntington's disease (HD), a fatal, devastating neurodegenerative disorder causing progressive deterioration of both physical and mental abilities, and which brain region is affected first. We studied the spatio-temporal relationship between axon pathology, neuronal loss, and mutant Huntingtin aggregate formation in HD mouse models by crossing R6/2 transgenic and HdhQ140 knock-in mice with YFP-H mice expressing the yellow fluorescent protein in a subset of neurons. We found large axonal swellings developing age-dependently first in stria terminalis and then in corticostriatal axons of HdhQ140 mice, whereas alterations of other neuronal compartments could not be detected. Although mutant Huntingtin accumulated with age in several brain areas, inclusions in the soma did not correlate with swelling of the corresponding axons. Axon abnormalities were not a prominent feature of the rapid progressive pathology of R6/2 mice. Our findings in mice genetically similar to HD patients suggest that axon pathology is an early event in HD and indicate the importance of further studies of stria terminalis axons in man.


Aging/pathology , Axons/pathology , Huntington Disease/pathology , Nerve Degeneration , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Gene Knock-In Techniques , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Septal Nuclei/pathology
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