Identifying the key functions of MeCP2 via genetic manipulation in mice
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Tillotson, Anne Rebekah
Abstract
MeCP2 was identified by its ability to bind DNA in a methylation-specific manner.
Yet, how it interprets the DNA methylome remains unclear. Several mechanisms
have been proposed, including a role in transcriptional repression. MeCP2 is highly
abundant in the brain, and loss-of-function mutations result in a neurological disorder
called Rett syndrome (RTT). Strikingly, RTT-causing missense mutations are almost
all located in either the methyl-CpG-binding domain (MBD) or a region that has
been shown to bind the NCoR/SMRT co-repressor complex (NID). This suggests
that the MBD and the NID are the key functional domains in MeCP2, and that the
role of MeCP2 is to form a ‘bridge’ between chromatin and the co-repressor complex
to regulate gene expression. To test this ‘bridge’ hypothesis, I have made an allelic
series of knock-in mice with truncated forms of MeCP2 to determine whether the
other regions are dispensable for protein function. The three other regions of MeCP2
(the N-terminus before the MBD, the Intervening region between the MBD and the
NID, and the C-terminus after the NID) were deleted in a step-wise manner to
produce progressively smaller truncated proteins. Knock-in mice which lack just the
N-terminus or both the N- and C-termini are phenotypically normal. Therefore, these
regions, which together make up 46% of the protein sequence, are dispensable for
MeCP2 function in vivo. Additional deletion of the Intervening region, retaining only
34% of the original sequence, results in mild RTT-like symptoms in the knock in
mice. This is likely to be caused by this protein’s decreased stability and reduced
ability to bind the NCoR/SMRT complex in the brain. The most severely truncated
protein is nevertheless able to reverse the Mecp2-null phenotype when reactivated
after the onset of symptoms. Together, these findings strongly support the ‘bridge’
hypothesis.
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