Login / Signup

Canine DUXC: Implications for DUX4 retrotransposition and preclinical models of FSHD.

Chao-Jen WongJennifer L WhiddonAshlee T LangfordAndrea E BellevilleStephen J Tapscott
Published in: Human molecular genetics (2021)
Mis-expression of DUX4 in skeletal muscle causes facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD). Human DUX4 and mouse Dux are retrogenes derived from retrotransposition of the mRNA from the parental DUXC gene. Primates and rodents have lost the parental DUXC gene and it is unknown whether DUXC had a similar role in driving an early pluripotent transcriptional program. Dogs and other Laurasiatherians have retained DUXC, providing an opportunity to determine the functional similarity to the retrotransposed DUX4 and Dux. Here we identify expression of two isoforms of DUXC mRNA in canine testis tissues, one encoding the canonical double homeodomain protein (DUXC), similar to DUX4/Dux, and a second that includes an in-frame alternative exon that disrupts the conserved amino-acid sequence of the first homeodomain (DUXC-ALT). Expression of DUXC in canine cells induces a pluripotent program similar to DUX4 and Dux, and induces expression of a similar set of retrotransposons of the ERV/MaLR and LINE-1 families, as well as pericentromeric satellite repeats; whereas DUXC-ALT did not robustly activate gene expression in these assays. Important for preclinical models of FSHD, human DUX4 and canine DUXC show higher conservation of their homeodomains and corresponding binding motifs compared to the conservation between human DUX4 and mouse Dux, and human DUX4 activates a highly similar transcriptional program in canine cells. Together, these findings show that retrotransposition resulted in the loss of an alternatively spliced isoform and that DUXC containing mammals might be good candidates for certain pre-clinical models of FSHD.
Keyphrases