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Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

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Page 1: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci
Page 2: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain.

Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci. 2013;33:13612-13620

©2013 by Society for Neuroscience

Page 3: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

MeCP2 expressed from virus binds to DNA, restores normal neuronal somal size, and improves survival.

Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci. 2013;33:13612-13620

©2013 by Society for Neuroscience

Page 4: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci
Page 5: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

Inappropriate Silencing of Genes

• Fragile-X Syndrome

Page 6: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

Fragile-X Syndrome

Length Methylation Females Males

Stable 6 to ~45 Unmethylated Not affected Not affected

Gray zone ~45 to ~55 Unmethylated Not affected Not affected

Premutation ~55 to ~200 UnmethylatedUsually not

affectedUsually not

affected

Full mutation >200Completely methylated

~50% affected

All affected

Page 7: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

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Page 8: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

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Page 9: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci
Page 10: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

Skewed X-Chromosome inactivation in a family with Fragile X

Page 11: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

Southern Blot Analysis

“A normal female will show an unmethylated 2.8-kb band and a 5.2-kb methylated band that correspond to the normal FMR1 gene present in the active and inactive X chromosome, respectively.”

Blood sample

Digest genomic DNA with EcoRI and EagI

Electrophoresis and transfer to membrane

Hybridize with FMR1 specific probe

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DNA Methylation

• Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

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DNA Methylation

• Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome – Above average birth weight– Increase growth after birth (>95% growth

curve)– Enlarged organs– Hypoglycemic following birth– Increase risk of cancers

• Imprinting defect located at 11p15.5

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Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

• Genetic causes of BWS:– Maternal DMR hypermethylation– UPD– Remainder unknown

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Page 16: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

The Journal of PathologyVolume 211, Issue 3, pages 261-268, 18 DEC 2006 DOI: 10.1002/path.2116http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/path.2116/full#fig1

Page 17: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci

The Journal of PathologyVolume 211, Issue 3, pages 261-268, 18 DEC 2006 DOI: 10.1002/path.2116http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/path.2116/full#fig3

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Genes Dev. Vol. 11, No. 23, pp. 3128-3142, December 1, 1997

Mouse mutant embryos overexpressing IGF-II exhibit phenotypic features of the Beckwith-Wiedemann and Simpson-Golabi-Behmel syndromes

Jonathan Eggenschwiler,1 Thomas Ludwig,2 Peter Fisher,3 Philip A. Leighton,4,5 Shirley M. Tilghman,4 and Argiris Efstratiadis1,6

Page 19: Systemic injection of Mecp2Bnull/y mice with scAAV9/MeCP2 virus results in MeCP2 expression in different cell types in brain. Garg S K et al. J. Neurosci
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Feinberg AP et al. (2005) The epigenetic progenitor origin of human cancerNat Rev gene. 7: 21–33 doi:10.1038/nri1748

Figure 2 The epigenetic progenitor model of cancer.

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

Prader-Willi Angelman

Mild mental retardation Severe impairment and loss of speech

endocrine abnormalities seizures and ataxia

temper tantrums unprovoked laughter

Obesity hyperactivity

1 in 15,000 1 in 15,000

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• Angelman syndrome

• Genes/proteins involved

• Prader-Willi syndrome

• Genes/proteins involved

15q11-13

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• UBE3A is paternally silenced

• This primarily occurs in brain, other tissues show biallelic expression

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• What happens in each pathologies?

• If the maternal copy of chromosome 15 is missing, then genes normally expressed from this parental origin are not expressed

• Consequences…

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• If paternal chromosome 15 is missing, then only the maternally expressed proteins are made

• Consequence: UBE3A is ok, but other genes in the region are not expressed…Prader-Willi syndrome

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• Thus, two different diseases based on the cells “memory” of methylation – alter the memory, alter the phenotype

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

• How do you “lose” chromosome 15?

– Microdeletion of 15q11-13 on one chromsome – 70%

– Single gene mutation – 15% of AS

– Defect in imprinting centre (IC) – 5%

– Uniparental Disomy – 30% of PWS, 5% AS

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Prader-Willi and Angelman Syndrome

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Uniparental Disomy

• Receive two chromosomes from one parent

• Eg. Paternal disomy – both of chromosome 15 are from father, thus both have silenced UBE3A

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Uniparental Disomy

• How does it happen?

• Trisomic Rescue - majority• Monosomic Duplication

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Meiosis I

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Meiosis II

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Meiosis I Non-disjunction

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Meiosis I Non-disjunction

Fertilization

Trisomy Meiosis I non-disjunction always creates a problem

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Meiosis II Non-disjunction

Fertilization Fertilization

Trisomy Normal

2/3 gametes following Meiosis II non-disjunction are normal

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Trisomy

• Trisomy for most autosomal chromosomes is lethal

• BIG exception: Trisomy 21, smallest autosomal chromosome, fewest genes, not lethal

• Under rare conditions, some autosomal trisomies can escape – Trisomic Rescue

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Trisomic Rescue following Meiosis I Non-disjunction

Two copies of homologous, but not identical, chromosomes+

Maternal

Maternal

Paternal

M,M1/3

M,P1/3

M,P1/3

Anaphase lag

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Trisomic Rescue following Meiosis II Non-disjunction

+

M,M1/3

M,P2/3

Two copies of identical chromosomes

Anaphase lag

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Uniparental Disomy

• How does it happen?

• Trisomic Rescue - majority

• Monosomic Duplication

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Monosomic Duplication

+

P,P

Two identical copies of paternal chromosome - isodisomy

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Parental Origin Determines Phenotype

Prader-Willi Syndrome

M,M

{15

M,M

Prader-Willi Syndrome

P,P

Angelman Syndrome

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Prader-Willi and Angelman syndrome

• Non-disjunction is more common in Meiosis I in females

• In human females, Meiosis I starts before birth but is arrested at diplotene stage (late prophase I)

• Oocytes sit like this for decades• Complete meiosis II once each month• While arrested at the diplotene stage, the tetrad chromosomes

are held together by chiasmata (formed during recombination)• If a pair of chromosomes don’t undergo recombination, the lack

of chiasmata can contribute to non-disjunction

• Uniparental Disomy – 30% of PWS, 5% ASMaternal non-disjunction and trisomic rescue leading to the pair of maternal chromosomes

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Uniparental Disomy and Human Disease

Eric Engel. Some lessons from uniparental disomy (UPD) in the framework of contemporary cytogenetics and molecular biology.Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. December 2003.

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Trisomic rescue of Meiosis II non-disjunction can have other problems

Anaphase lag{

Pair of identicalchromosomes

(isochromosomes)

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Uniparental disomy as a mechanism for human genetic disease.Spence JE, Perciaccante RG, Greig GM, Willard HF, Ledbetter DH, Hejtmancik JF, Pollack MS, O'Brien WE, Beaudet AL.

Am J Hum Genet. 1988 Feb;42(2):217-26.

CFTR-/+CFTR+/+

CFTR-/- {Pair of identicalChromosome 7

Harboring CFTR mutation

Uniparental isodisomy and reduction to homozygosity