Role of chondrolectin in motor axon development in zebrafish
dc.contributor.advisor
Becker, Thomas
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Becker, Catherina
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dc.contributor.advisor
Zhang, Hongyan
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dc.contributor.advisor
Gillingwater, Tom
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dc.contributor.author
Smith, Hannah L.
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dc.date.accessioned
2019-07-24T09:55:51Z
dc.date.available
2019-07-24T09:55:51Z
dc.date.issued
2019-04-24
dc.description.abstract
Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is a childhood form of motor neuron disease (MND).
It is monogenic, caused by loss of Smn1. Although Smn is ubiquitously expressed in
all cells, and acts in a housekeeping function to correctly assemble the spliceosome,
motor neurons are specifically vulnerable to loss of Smn. This leads to degeneration
of the motor neurons. Mounting evidence shows that this degeneration starts at the
neuromuscular junction and then proceeds to the motor axon. Studies have identified
chondrolectin as a downstream gene adversely affected by the Smn deficiency.
Chondrolectin is mis-spliced pre-symptomatically in mouse models of SMA. The
protein is required for motor axon outgrowth in zebrafish, and over-expression of
chondrolectin partially rescues smn knockdown.
In this project, I generated a CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of chondrolectin in the zebrafish.
The mutant is homozygous viable and has no gross morphological defects, but the
primary motor axons phenocopy previously published morpholino knockdown. The
axons are stalled at a choice point called the horizontal myoseptum, which is known
to be rich in ECM proteins such as collagens. Using both acute manipulation and a
stable transgenic line, I demonstrate that only full-length chondrolectin is able to
rescue the axon length, and loss of any of its protein domains leaves the protein non-functional.
From this, we hypothesise a mechanism of action for this protein where it
binds an ECM molecule on the axon surface and transduces a signal via
phosphorylation of its intracellular domain. We suggest the binding partner for
chondrolectin to be collagenXIXa1.
SMA has been linked to synaptic defects, therefore, I analysed the synaptic
compartments of the axons in the chondrolectin mutant at embryonic and larval
stages. At embryonic stages, the pre-synaptic compartment is enlarged around the
horizontal myoseptum in the mutant compared to wild-types, and fully rescued in a
stable chondrolectin-FLAG line. When the secondary motor neurons have also
extended axons to innervate the myotome, there are fewer synaptic puncta in the
mutant compared to wild-type. This synapse phenotype is partially rescued in the
stable transgenic chondrolectin-FLAG line.
Due to the stereotypical phenotype of the chondrolectin mutant, and its relationship
with SMA, we developed a drug screening protocol to discover molecules that improve
axon growth. We identified two hits after screening a 40-compound library.
Developing this protocol allows refinement of potentially useful compounds from
larger libraries to use in other models of SMA.
Overall, this project offers new insight into the mechanism and function of
chondrolectin, a gene linked to SMA. Novel findings include the domain analysis
demonstrating that all protein domains are required for its function in zebrafish. We
also found that loss of chondrolectin leads to synaptic defects, with embryonic
synapse puncta enlarged in the mutant, and a loss of synaptic puncta in the larval
stage. Finally, we have demonstrated potential translational uses for this mutant by
designing a protocol to identify axon growth-enhancing compounds.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/35843
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
Spinal Muscular Atrophy
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dc.subject
axon
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dc.subject
zebrafish
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dc.subject
chondrolectin
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dc.subject
Smn1
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dc.subject
collagenXIXa1
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dc.title
Role of chondrolectin in motor axon development in zebrafish
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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