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Dstyk mutation leads to congenital scoliosis-like vertebral malformations in zebrafish via dysregulated mTORC1/TFEB pathway

Author

Listed:
  • Xianding Sun

    (Army Medical University)

  • Yang Zhou

    (Southwest University)

  • Ruobin Zhang

    (Army Medical University)

  • Zuqiang Wang

    (Army Medical University)

  • Meng Xu

    (Army Medical University)

  • Dali Zhang

    (Army Medical University)

  • Junlan Huang

    (Army Medical University)

  • Fengtao Luo

    (Army Medical University)

  • Fangfang Li

    (Army Medical University)

  • Zhenhong Ni

    (Army Medical University)

  • Siru Zhou

    (Army Medical University)

  • Hangang Chen

    (Army Medical University)

  • Shuai Chen

    (Army Medical University)

  • Liang Chen

    (Army Medical University)

  • Xiaolan Du

    (Army Medical University)

  • Bo Chen

    (Army Medical University)

  • Haiyang Huang

    (Army Medical University)

  • Peng Liu

    (Army Medical University)

  • Liangjun Yin

    (Chongqing Medical University)

  • Juhui Qiu

    (Chongqing University)

  • Di Chen

    (Rush University Medical Center)

  • Chuxia Deng

    (National Institutes of Health
    University of Macau)

  • Yangli Xie

    (Army Medical University)

  • Lingfei Luo

    (Southwest University)

  • Lin Chen

    (Army Medical University)

Abstract

Congenital scoliosis (CS) is a complex genetic disorder characterized by vertebral malformations. The precise etiology of CS is not fully defined. Here, we identify that mutation in dual serine/threonine and tyrosine protein kinase (dstyk) lead to CS-like vertebral malformations in zebrafish. We demonstrate that the scoliosis in dstyk mutants is related to the wavy and malformed notochord sheath formation and abnormal axial skeleton segmentation due to dysregulated biogenesis of notochord vacuoles and notochord function. Further studies show that DSTYK is located in late endosomal/lysosomal compartments and is involved in the lysosome biogenesis in mammalian cells. Dstyk knockdown inhibits notochord vacuole and lysosome biogenesis through mTORC1-dependent repression of TFEB nuclear translocation. Inhibition of mTORC1 activity can rescue the defect in notochord vacuole biogenesis and scoliosis in dstyk mutants. Together, our findings reveal a key role of DSTYK in notochord vacuole biogenesis, notochord morphogenesis and spine development through mTORC1/TFEB pathway.

Suggested Citation

  • Xianding Sun & Yang Zhou & Ruobin Zhang & Zuqiang Wang & Meng Xu & Dali Zhang & Junlan Huang & Fengtao Luo & Fangfang Li & Zhenhong Ni & Siru Zhou & Hangang Chen & Shuai Chen & Liang Chen & Xiaolan Du, 2020. "Dstyk mutation leads to congenital scoliosis-like vertebral malformations in zebrafish via dysregulated mTORC1/TFEB pathway," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-17, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-14169-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-14169-z
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