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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Molecular Biology of the Fragile X Syndrome

Joel Richter

Dr.

University of Massachusetts

Schedule
Tuesday, November 17, 2020

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Schedule

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

5:00 AM Canada/Eastern

Host: McGill Neuro

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

McGill Neuro

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Silencing of FMR1 and loss of its gene product, FMRP, results in fragile X syndrome (FXS). FMRP binds brain mRNAs and inhibits polypeptide elongation. Using ribosome profiling of the hippocampus, we find that ribosome footprint levels in Fmr1-deficient tissue mostly reflect changes in RNA abundance. Profiling over a time course of ribosome runoff in wild-type tissue reveals a wide range of ribosome translocation rates; on many mRNAs, the ribosomes are stalled. Sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation of hippocampal slices after ribosome runoff reveals that FMRP co-sediments with stalled ribosomes, and its loss results in decline of ribosome stalling on specific mRNAs. One such mRNA encodes SETD2, a lysine methyltransferase that catalyzes H3K36me3. Chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) demonstrates that loss of FMRP alters the deployment of this histone mark. H3K36me3 is associated with alternative pre-RNA processing, which we find occurs in an FMRP-dependent manner on transcripts linked to neural function and autism spectrum disorders.

Topics

ChIP-seqFMR1FMRPH3K36me3RNA abundanceSETD2fragile X syndromemRNAribosomeribosome profilingribosome stalling

About the Speaker

Joel Richter

Dr.

University of Massachusetts

Contact & Resources

No additional contact information available

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