Seizures Are Regulated by Ubiquitin-specific Peptidase 9 X-linked (USP9X), a De-Ubiquitinase

  • Lily Paemka
  • , Vinit B. Mahajan
  • , Salleh N. Ehaideb
  • , Jessica M. Skeie
  • , Men Chee Tan
  • , Shu Wu
  • , Allison J. Cox
  • , Levi P. Sowers
  • , Jozef Gecz
  • , Lachlan Jolly
  • , Polly J. Ferguson
  • , Benjamin Darbro
  • , Amy Schneider
  • , Ingrid E. Scheffer
  • , Gemma L. Carvill
  • , Heather C. Mefford
  • , Hatem El-Shanti
  • , Stephen A. Wood
  • , J. Robert Manak
  • , Alexander G. Bassuk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

64 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Epilepsy is a common disabling disease with complex, multifactorial genetic and environmental etiology. The small fraction of epilepsies subject to Mendelian inheritance offers key insight into epilepsy disease mechanisms; and pathologies brought on by mutations in a single gene can point the way to generalizable therapeutic strategies. Mutations in the PRICKLE genes can cause seizures in humans, zebrafish, mice, and flies, suggesting the seizure-suppression pathway is evolutionarily conserved. This pathway has never been targeted for novel anti-seizure treatments. Here, the mammalian PRICKLE-interactome was defined, identifying prickle-interacting proteins that localize to synapses and a novel interacting partner, USP9X, a substrate-specific de-ubiquitinase. PRICKLE and USP9X interact through their carboxy-termini; and USP9X de-ubiquitinates PRICKLE, protecting it from proteasomal degradation. In forebrain neurons of mice, USP9X deficiency reduced levels of Prickle2 protein. Genetic analysis suggests the same pathway regulates Prickle-mediated seizures. The seizure phenotype was suppressed in prickle mutant flies by the small-molecule USP9X inhibitor, Degrasyn/WP1130, or by reducing the dose of fat facets a USP9X orthologue. USP9X mutations were identified by resequencing a cohort of patients with epileptic encephalopathy, one patient harbored a de novo missense mutation and another a novel coding mutation. Both USP9X variants were outside the PRICKLE-interacting domain. These findings demonstrate that USP9X inhibition can suppress prickle-mediated seizure activity, and that USP9X variants may predispose to seizures. These studies point to a new target for anti-seizure therapy and illustrate the translational power of studying diseases in species across the evolutionary spectrum.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere1005022
JournalPLoS Genetics
Volume11
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished or Issued - 12 Mar 2015
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Molecular Biology
  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)
  • Cancer Research

Cite this