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The ALS-associated proteins FUS and TDP-43 function together to affect Drosophila locomotion and life span
Ji-Wu Wang, Jonathan R. Brent, Andrew Tomlinson, Neil A. Shneider, Brian D. McCabe
Ji-Wu Wang, Jonathan R. Brent, Andrew Tomlinson, Neil A. Shneider, Brian D. McCabe
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Research Article Neuroscience

The ALS-associated proteins FUS and TDP-43 function together to affect Drosophila locomotion and life span

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Abstract

The fatal adult motor neuron disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) shares some clinical and pathological overlap with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), an early-onset neurodegenerative disorder. The RNA/DNA-binding proteins fused in sarcoma (FUS; also known as TLS) and TAR DNA binding protein-43 (TDP-43) have recently been shown to be genetically and pathologically associated with familial forms of ALS and FTD. It is currently unknown whether perturbation of these proteins results in disease through mechanisms that are independent of normal protein function or via the pathophysiological disruption of molecular processes in which they are both critical. Here, we report that Drosophila mutants in which the homolog of FUS is disrupted exhibit decreased adult viability, diminished locomotor speed, and reduced life span compared with controls. These phenotypes were fully rescued by wild-type human FUS, but not ALS-associated mutant FUS proteins. A mutant of the Drosophila homolog of TDP-43 had similar, but more severe, deficits. Through cross-rescue analysis, we demonstrated that FUS acted together with and downstream of TDP-43 in a common genetic pathway in neurons. Furthermore, we found that these proteins associated with each other in an RNA-dependent complex. Our results establish that FUS and TDP-43 function together in vivo and suggest that molecular pathways requiring the combined activities of both of these proteins may be disrupted in ALS and FTD.

Authors

Ji-Wu Wang, Jonathan R. Brent, Andrew Tomlinson, Neil A. Shneider, Brian D. McCabe

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Figure 4

Caz and TBPH proteins interact.

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Caz and TBPH proteins interact.
(A) YFP-tagged TBPH expressed in Drosoph...
(A) YFP-tagged TBPH expressed in Drosophila adult brains with C155-Gal4 coimmunoprecipitates when flag-tagged Caz is used for pulldown. Treatment of brain extracts with RNaseA inhibits this interaction. (B) Endogenous TBPH protein levels were not changed in 1-day-old caz mutant males compared with precise excision controls, and genomic flag-Caz protein is similar in 1-day-old tbph mutants compared with controls. (C) 4 of the 8 C-terminal amino acids of human FUS and Drosophila Caz are identical (green), and 2 (red) were mutated in Caz cDNA transgenes. (D) Drosophila motor neuron cell bodies expressing UAS-Caz, UAS-CazR395G, and UAS-CazP398L (green), histone-YFP (red), and cytoplasmic β-galactosidase (blue) driven by the motor neuron driver OK319-Gal4 or single channel images of Caz or Caz mutants (gray). Unlike wild-type Caz, both Caz C-terminal mutants are found extensively in the cytoplasm. (E) YFP-TBPH coimmunoprecipitates when flag-tagged CazR395G or CazP398L is used for pulldown from adult brain extracts.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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