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A kinase-dead Csf1r mutation associated with adult-onset leukoencephalopathy has a dominant inhibitory impact on CSF1R signalling
Author(s) -
Jennifer Stables,
Emma K. Green,
Anuj Sehgal,
Omkar L. Patkar,
Sahar Keshvari,
Isis Taylor,
Maisie E. Ashcroft,
Kathleen Grabert,
Evi Wollscheid-Lengeling,
Stefan Szymkowiak,
Barry W. McColl,
Antony Adamson,
Neil Humphreys,
Werner Müller,
Hana Starobova,
Irina Vetter,
Sepideh Kiani Shabestari,
Mathew BlurtonJones,
Kim Summers,
Katharine M. Irvine,
Clare Pridans,
David Hume
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.754
H-Index - 325
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.200237
Subject(s) - biology , leukoencephalopathy , leukodystrophy , mutation , knockout mouse , immunology , genetics , pathology , gene , disease , medicine
Amino acid substitutions in the kinase domain of the human CSF1R gene are associated with autosomal dominant adult-onset leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP). To model the human disease, we created a disease-associated mutation (pGlu631Lys; E631K) in the mouse Csf1r locus. Homozygous mutation (Csf1rE631K/E631K) phenocopied the Csf1r knockout, with prenatal mortality or severe postnatal growth retardation and hydrocephalus. Heterozygous mutation delayed the postnatal expansion of tissue macrophage populations in most organs. Bone marrow cells from Csf1rE631K/+mice were resistant to CSF1 stimulation in vitro, and Csf1rE631K/+ mice were unresponsive to administration of a CSF1-Fc fusion protein, which expanded tissue macrophage populations in controls. In the brain, microglial cell numbers and dendritic arborisation were reduced in Csf1rE631K/+ mice, as in patients with ALSP. The microglial phenotype is the opposite of microgliosis observed in Csf1r+/− mice. However, we found no evidence of brain pathology or impacts on motor function in aged Csf1rE631K/+ mice. We conclude that heterozygous disease-associated CSF1R mutations compromise CSF1R signalling. We speculate that leukoencephalopathy associated with dominant human CSF1R mutations requires an environmental trigger and/or epistatic interaction with common neurodegenerative disease-associated alleles.

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