Mislocalization to the nuclear envelope: an effect of the dystonia-causing torsinA mutation

RE Goodchild, WT Dauer - Proceedings of the National …, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004National Acad Sciences
Primary dystonia is a disease characterized by involuntary twisting movements caused by
CNS dysfunction without underlying histopathology. DYT1 dystonia is a form of primary
dystonia caused by an in-frame GAG deletion (ΔE302/3) in the TOR1A gene that encodes
the endoplasmic reticulum luminal protein torsinA. We show that torsinA is also present in
the nuclear envelope (NE), where it appears to interact with substrate, and that the ΔE302/3
mutation causes a striking redistribution of torsinA from the endoplasmic reticulum to the NE …
Primary dystonia is a disease characterized by involuntary twisting movements caused by CNS dysfunction without underlying histopathology. DYT1 dystonia is a form of primary dystonia caused by an in-frame GAG deletion (ΔE302/3) in the TOR1A gene that encodes the endoplasmic reticulum luminal protein torsinA. We show that torsinA is also present in the nuclear envelope (NE), where it appears to interact with substrate, and that the ΔE302/3 mutation causes a striking redistribution of torsinA from the endoplasmic reticulum to the NE. In addition, ΔE302/3-torsinA recruits WT torsinA to the NE, potentially providing insight into an understanding of the dominant inheritance of the disease. DYT1 dystonia appears to be a previously uncharacterized NE disease and the first, to our knowledge, to selectively affect CNS function.
National Acad Sciences