TorsinA in the nuclear envelope

TV Naismith, JE Heuser… - Proceedings of the …, 2004 - National Acad Sciences
TV Naismith, JE Heuser, XO Breakefield, PI Hanson
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2004National Acad Sciences
Early-onset torsion dystonia, a CNS-based movement disorder, is usually associated with a
single amino acid deletion (ΔE302/303) in the protein torsinA. TorsinA is an AAA+ ATPase in
the endoplasmic reticulum, but what it does is unknown. Here, we use torsinA mutants with
defects in ATP hydrolysis (E171Q, ATP-bound) and ATP binding (K108A, ATP-free) to probe
torsinA's normal cellular function. Surprisingly, ATP-bound torsinA is recruited to the nuclear
envelope (NE) of transfected cells, where it alters connections between inner and outer …
Early-onset torsion dystonia, a CNS-based movement disorder, is usually associated with a single amino acid deletion (ΔE302/303) in the protein torsinA. TorsinA is an AAA+ ATPase in the endoplasmic reticulum, but what it does is unknown. Here, we use torsinA mutants with defects in ATP hydrolysis (E171Q, ATP-bound) and ATP binding (K108A, ATP-free) to probe torsinA's normal cellular function. Surprisingly, ATP-bound torsinA is recruited to the nuclear envelope (NE) of transfected cells, where it alters connections between inner and outer nuclear membranes. In contrast, ATP-free torsinA is diffusely distributed throughout the endoplasmic reticulum and has no effect on the NE. Among AAA+ ATPases, affinity for substrates is high in the ATP-bound and low in the ATP-free state, leading us to propose that component(s) of the NE may be substrates for torsinA. We also find that the disease-promoting ΔE302/303 mutant is in the NE, and that this relocalization, as well as the mutant's previously described ability to induce membranous inclusions, is eliminated by the K108A ATP-binding mutation. These results suggest that changes in interactions involving torsinA in the NE could be important for the pathogenesis of dystonia and point to torsinA and related proteins as a class of ATPases that may operate in the NE.
National Acad Sciences