Authors
TJ Kwiatkowski Jr, DA Bosco, AL Leclerc, E Tamrazian, CR Vanderburg, C Russ, A Davis, J Gilchrist, EJ Kasarskis, T Munsat, P Valdmanis, GA Rouleau, BA Hosler, Pietro Cortelli, PJ De Jong, Y Yoshinaga, JL Haines, MA Pericak-Vance, J Yan, N Ticozzi, T Siddique, D McKenna-Yasek, PC Sapp, HR Horvitz, JE Landers, RH Brown Jr
Publication date
2009/2/27
Journal
Science
Volume
323
Issue
5918
Pages
1205-1208
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal degenerative motor neuron disorder. Ten percent of cases are inherited; most involve unidentified genes. We report here 13 mutations in the fused in sarcoma/translated in liposarcoma (FUS/TLS) gene on chromosome 16 that were specific for familial ALS. The FUS/TLS protein binds to RNA, functions in diverse processes, and is normally located predominantly in the nucleus. In contrast, the mutant forms of FUS/TLS accumulated in the cytoplasm of neurons, a pathology that is similar to that of the gene TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP43), whose mutations also cause ALS. Neuronal cytoplasmic protein aggregation and defective RNA metabolism thus appear to be common pathogenic mechanisms involved in ALS and possibly in other neurodegenerative disorders.
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Scholar articles