Nuclear clearance and cytoplasmic aggregation of TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) are observed in many neurodegenerative disorders, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Although TDP-43 dysregulation of splicing has emerged as a key event in these diseases, TDP-43 can also regulate polyadenylation; yet this has not been adequately studied. Here, we applied the dynamic analysis of polyadenylation from an RNA-Seq (DaPars) tool to ALS/FTD transcriptome datasets and report extensive alternative polyadenylation (APA) upon TDP-43 alteration in ALS/FTD cell models and postmortem ALS/FTD neuronal nuclei. Importantly, many identified APA genes highlight pathways implicated in ALS/FTD pathogenesis. To determine the functional relevance of APA elicited by TDP-43 nuclear depletion, we examined microtubule affinity regulating kinase 3 (MARK3). Nuclear loss of TDP-43 yielded increased expression of MARK3 transcripts with longer 3′ UTRs, corresponding with a change in the subcellular distribution of MARK3 and increased neuronal tau S262 phosphorylation. Our findings define changes in polyadenylation site selection as a previously understudied feature of TDP-43–driven disease pathology in ALS/FTD and highlight a potentially important mechanistic link between TDP-43 dysfunction and tau regulation.
Frederick J. Arnold, Ya Cui, Sebastian Michels, Michael R. Colwin, Cameron M. Stockford, Wenbin Ye, Vidhya Maheswari Jawahar, Karen Jansen-West, Julien Philippe, Ravinder Gulia, Yunzi Gou, Oliver H. Tam, Sneha Menon, Wendy G. Situ, Saira L. Cazarez, Aryan Zandi, Kean C.K. Ehsani, Sierra Howard, Dennis W. Dickson, Molly Gale Hammell, Mercedes Prudencio, Leonard Petrucelli, Wei Li, Albert R. La Spada
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