نتایج جستجو برای: smn gene

تعداد نتایج: 1142093  

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2006
Honglai Zhang Lei Xing Wilfried Rossoll Hynek Wichterle Robert H Singer Gary J Bassell

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a progressive neurodegenerative disease affecting motor neurons, is caused by mutations or deletions of the SMN1 gene encoding the survival of motor neuron (SMN) protein. In immortalized non-neuronal cell lines, SMN has been shown to form a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex with Gemin proteins, which is essential for the assembly of small nuclear RNPs (snRNPs). An a...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2006
Tessa L Carrel Michelle L McWhorter Eileen Workman Honglai Zhang Elizabeth C Wolstencroft Christian Lorson Gary J Bassell Arthur H M Burghes Christine E Beattie

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a motor neuron degenerative disease caused by low levels of the survival motor neuron (SMN) protein and is linked to mutations or loss of SMN1 and retention of SMN2. How low levels of SMN cause SMA is unclear. SMN functions in small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) biogenesis, but recent studies indicate that SMN may also function in axons. We showed previously...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Karl B Shpargel A Gregory Matera

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by loss of spinal motor neurons. The gene encoding the survival of motor neurons (SMN) protein is mutated in >95% of SMA cases. SMN is the central component of a large oligomeric complex, including Gemins2-7, that is necessary and sufficient for the in vivo assembly of Sm proteins onto the small nuclear (sn)RNAs that med...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2000
Bernard Charroux Livio Pellizzoni Robert A. Perkinson Jeongsik Yong Andrej Shevchenko Matthias Mann Gideon Dreyfuss

The survival of motor neurons (SMN) protein, the product of the neurodegenerative disease spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) gene, is localized both in the cytoplasm and in discrete nuclear bodies called gems. In both compartments SMN is part of a large complex that contains several proteins including Gemin2 (formerly SIP1) and the DEAD box protein Gemin3. In the cytoplasm, the SMN complex is associ...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2001
K W Jones K Gorzynski C M Hales U Fischer F Badbanchi R M Terns M P Terns

Disruption of the survival motor neuron (SMN) gene leads to selective loss of spinal motor neurons, resulting in the fatal human neurodegenerative disorder spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). SMN has been shown to function in spliceosomal small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) biogenesis and pre-mRNA splicing. We have demonstrated that SMN also interacts with fibrillarin, a highly conserved nucleol...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2000
W J Friesen G Dreyfuss

The spinal muscular atrophy disease gene product (SMN) is crucial for small nuclear ribonuclear protein (snRNP) biogenesis in the cytoplasm and plays a role in pre-mRNA splicing in the nucleus. SMN oligomers interact avidly with the snRNP core proteins SmB, -D1, and -D3. We have delineated the specific sequences in the Sm proteins that mediate their interaction with SMN. We show that unique car...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2013
Melissa S Cobb Ferril F Rose Hansjörg Rindt Jacqueline J Glascock Monir Shababi Madeline R Miller Erkan Y Osman Pei-Fen Yen Michael L Garcia Brittanie R Martin Mary J Wetz Chiara Mazzasette Zhihua Feng Chien-Ping Ko Christian L Lorson

Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is due to the loss of the survival motor neuron gene 1 (SMN1), resulting in motor neuron (MN) degeneration, muscle atrophy and loss of motor function. While SMN2 encodes a protein identical to SMN1, a single nucleotide difference in exon 7 causes most of the SMN2-derived transcripts to be alternatively spliced resulting in a truncated and unstable protein (SMNΔ7). ...

2009
Jason H. Williams Rebecca C. Schray Carlyn A. Patterson Semira O. Ayitey Melanie K. Tallent Gordon J. Lutz

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by homozygous mutation or deletion of the SMN1 gene encoding survival of motor neuron (SMN) protein, resulting in the selective loss of -motor neurons. Humans typically have one or more copies of the SMN2 gene, the coding region of which is nearly identical to SMN1, except that a point mutation causes splicing out of exon 7 and production of a largely non...

Journal: :Physiological genomics 2006
Robert Olaso Vandana Joshi Julien Fernandez Natacha Roblot Sabrina Courageot Jean Paul Bonnefont Judith Melki

Mutations of the survival of motor neuron gene (SMN1) are responsible for spinal muscular atrophies (SMA), a frequent recessive autosomal motor neuron disease. SMN is involved in various processes including RNA metabolism. However, the molecular pathway linking marked deficiency of SMN to SMA phenotype remains unclear. Homozygous deletion of murine Smn exon 7 directed to neurons or skeletal mus...

Journal: :Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 2005
Csilla Madocsai Sharlene R Lim Till Geib Bianca J Lam Klemens J Hertel

Mutations in one of the duplicated survival of motor neuron (SMN) genes lead to the progressive loss of motor neurons and subsequent development of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a common, and usually fatal, hereditary disease. Homozygous absence of the telomeric copy (SMN1) correlates with development of SMA because differential splicing of the centromeric copy (SMN2) leads to exon 7 skipping ...

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