Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common genetic disease in children. SMA is generally caused by mutations in the gene SMN1. The survival of motor neurons (SMN) complex consists of SMN1, Gemins (2–8), and Strap/Unrip. We previously demonstrated smn1 and gemin5 inhibited tissue regeneration in zebrafish. Here we investigated each individual SMN complex member and identified gemin3 as another regeneration-essential gene. These three genes are likely pan-regenerative, since they affect the regeneration of hair cells, liver, and caudal fin. RNA-Seq analysis reveals that smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 are linked to a common set of genetic pathways, including the tp53 and ErbB pathways. Additional studies indicated all three genes facilitate regeneration by inhibiting the ErbB pathway, thereby allowing cell proliferation in the injured neuromasts. This study provides a new understanding of the SMN complex and a potential etiology for SMA and potentially other rare unidentified genetic diseases with similar symptoms.
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Introduction
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the leading hereditary cause of infant mortality1,2. The majority of SMA cases are caused by mutations in the survival of motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene. SMN1 is ubiquitously expressed and a reduction of SMN1 protein leads to motor neuron death in patients afflicted with SMA. Although the incidence of SMA is ~1:6000 in live births, the carrier frequency for a heterozygous SMN1 mutation can approach 1:40 in adults. Many important questions remain regarding the pathology of the disease, including why the ubiquitously expressed SMN1 protein primarily impacts motor neurons, which other organs are potentially affected by SMN1 deficiencies, and whether SMA is a developmental or degenerative disease (or both).
The SMN1 protein is part of the SMN complex, responsible for the assembly of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP) needed for pre-mRNA splicing3,4. The SMN complex consists of nine proteins, however the majority of research on the complex has focused on the characterization of SMN1 and its role in SMA. In addition to its role in the SMN complex, SMN1 plays a role in many other biological processes, including axon growth, mRNA transport, ribosome biology, translational control, and maintaining intracellular homeostasis5,6,7,8. Although there is some evidence showing that other SMN complex members, such as GEMIN3 and GEMIN5, also have functions independent of the SMN complex9,10,11,12, it remains largely unknown how the other SMN complex members relate to SMA, and whether other members have functions beyond the SMN complex. A reduction of the SMN1 protein in SMA results in the reduction of other SMN complex members13, suggesting that there is a functional inter-dependence among the nine genes.
In a previous study14, we showed that mutations in smn1 and gemin5 negatively impacted the ability of zebrafish to regenerate different tissues after injury. Regenerative medicine is a rapidly expanding field of science that focuses on replacing or regenerating organs damaged by injury, aging, or degenerative conditions. An active area of research within regenerative medicine is the restoration of hearing by replacing the lost mechanosensory receptors of the inner ear known as hair cells. Age-related hair cell death impairs the hearing of hundreds of millions of the elderly and hearing loss as a side-effect of therapeutic medications remains a major concern15. In general, mammals have very limited regenerative capability, however many non-mammal animal models including the zebrafish have been used extensively because they possess a much broader capacity for wound healing, including the capacity to regenerate hearing after damage. Zebrafish are particularly well suited for studying the regeneration of hair cells because of a second organ that fish and amphibians possess on their skin known as the lateral line, which consists of clusters of hair cells in structures known as “neuromasts”16. Similar to the case in the mammalian inner ear, hair cells in the neuromasts are surrounded by support cells, which in fish and amphibians can replace the lost hair cells through either mitotic division or trans-differentiation. Support cells in the zebrafish neuromast are further surrounded by mantle cells, which resemble quiescent stem or progenitor cells17. Hair cell regeneration studies in zebrafish have uncovered numerous genetic factors and molecular pathways that are associated with the regeneration of hair cells18; conversely, random mutagenesis studies revealed that mutations in only a small number of genes actually alter hair cell regeneration specifically14,17,19,20. There is consistently a gap between the number of genes transcriptionally associated with regeneration and the number of genes essential for regeneration in other tissues as well21,22. Therefore, seeking novel genes essential for tissue regeneration is pivotal in understanding the core molecular mechanisms of wound healing, and for ultimately advancing regenerative medicine.
In this study, we systematically mutated all nine genes encoding SMN complex proteins. Using hair cell regeneration in the zebrafish lateral line as an assay, we identified three SMN complex members as essential factors that regulate regeneration through ErbB pathway-mediated cell proliferation. Additional studies revealed that these regenerative members were also essential for the regeneration of other tissues and all shared common transcriptional pathways altered in the mutant larvae. Our findings demonstrated a subset of the SMN complex proteins had separate functional roles involved in tissue regeneration.
Results
Divergent roles for SMN complex members in embryo development and hair cell regeneration
Hearing loss is one of the common sensory disorders negatively affecting the quality of life for hundreds of millions of people worldwide15. In a search for novel genes involved in hearing regeneration, we previously performed a large-scale mutagenesis screen in zebrafish and identified smn1 and gemin5 as essential genes for hair cell regeneration14. Both Smn1 and Gemin5 belong to the SMN complex, a multiprotein complex functioning in the biosynthesis of snRNP. To investigate whether the regenerative abilities of Smn1 and Gemin5 are linked to the SMN complex activity, we independently mutated all nine genes in the SMN complex (Supplementary Table 1) and examined their involvement in hair cell regeneration. We found that in addition to smn1 and gemin5, mutations in gemin3 altered hair cell regeneration but had no effect on initial hair cell development (Fig. 1a, Supplementary Fig. 1a). We also found that mutations in the other six SMN complex genes, gemin2, gemin4, gemin6, gemin7, gemin8, and strap/unrip, had no impact on hair cell regeneration (Fig. 1d–i). None of the nine mutants showed an overt morphological phenotype in early larvae (data not shown), but all mutants except gemin8 and strap failed to survive to adulthood (Supplementary Table 2). Altogether, these data classified the functions of the nine members of the SMN complex into three categories: three genes (Smn1, Gemin3, and Gemin5) were essential for hair cell regeneration and adult survival, four genes (Gemin2, Gemin4, Gemin6, and Gemin7) were essential for adult survival but not for hair cell regeneration, and two genes (Gemin8 and Strap) neither impacted regeneration nor survival.
We generated an additional mutant allele for the three genes involved in regeneration, smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 to verify their roles in hair cell regeneration. The second alleles all recapitulated the deficits in hair cell regeneration (Fig. 1b, c, Supplementary Fig. 1b). To examine whether the regeneration was specific to the ablation of hair cells using CuSO4, we performed the ablation using neomycin and observed similar regeneration deficits (Supplementary Fig. 1c–e).
In support of their divergent phenotypes in hair cell regeneration and adult survival, whole-mount in situ hybridization analysis showed that the SMN complex genes possessed some common but also some different expression patterns at 3 days post fertilization (dpf) (Supplementary Fig. 2a–h). The brain expression of these genes in particular revealed both shared and specific expression patterns: five genes were restricted to a stripe at approximately the mid-hindbrain boundary. smn1 was enriched in the eye regions and gemin5 was condensed at the midline of the brain; gemin3 expression was relatively weaker than the others; gemin7 and strap showed ubiquitous expression which was very different from the other gemins. At 1 dpf, a stronger similarity was detected in the brain expression between smn1 and gemin5 (Supplementary Fig. 2i). Both genes were enriched in the eyes, brain, and midline area. These differences in expression suggested that the gemins were not all necessarily expressed at stochiometric levels in all tissues.
Our whole-mount in situ hybridization analysis showed that none of the SMN complex genes were particularly enriched in the lateral line neuromasts (data not shown). However, single cell RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) analysis conducted by Lush et al. demonstrated that all these SMN complex genes are expressed at detectable levels in lateral line neuromasts, and different genes in the complex are expressed in different neuromast cell types at different levels (Supplementary Fig. 2j)17. The non-identical and complex patterns of gene expression for the different SMN subunits (as well as the different phenotypes) suggest that the various roles for each protein may not be simply as co-expressed subunits, but that the composition of the SMN complex and potentially alternate functions of the subunits may vary based on expression levels and cellular context.
Maternal mRNA and protein deposition allows zebrafish embryos to grow rapidly during the first few hours after birth and some maternal proteins can persist for days after fertilization. Although regeneration was analyzed at 7 dpf, we still examined whether the hair cell regeneration phenotype could be associated with the initial maternal deposition or a difference in the stability of mutant mRNAs. We analyzed the expression level of two regeneration genes (smn1 and gemin5) and three non-regeneration genes (gemin4, gemin6, and strap) at different stages of embryonic development by semi-quantitative PCR and found no clear difference between these two groups of genes (Supplementary Fig. 2k), suggesting mRNA destabilization does not explain hair cell regeneration phenotypes or eventual larval death.
Genetic interactions have been observed among SMN complex genes23,24,25. To study whether there is a synergy among the three genes involved in regeneration, we generated an smn1 and gemin5 double mutant and studied the effect of simultaneous depletion of two genes on morphology and hair cell regeneration. We found the smn1 and gemin5 double mutant had a normal embryonic morphology and normal hair cell development (data not shown), as observed in both the smn1 and gemin5 single mutants. The double mutant showed the expected deficiency in hair cell regeneration; however, the level of deficiency was comparable to that of the gemin5 mutant (Supplementary Fig. 3a–c). Taken together, these data suggest there is no functional synergy among these regeneration genes, and smn1 and gemin5 appear to both be necessary and fall in the same regenerative pathway as the phenotypes in double mutants were neither synergistic nor additive.
Along with the SMN complex, the PRMT5 complex is also involved in the assembly of snRNP26,27. The PRMT5 complex comprises three members (PRMT5, MED50, and pICln) encoded by the prmt5, wdr77, and clns1a genes, respectively. To investigate whether the PRMT5 complex members are involved in regeneration, we analyzed neuromast hair cell regeneration in the embryos after knockdown of these genes by injecting Cas9 protein with targeting single guide RNAs (sgRNAs). gemin5 guide RNAs were used as a system control. Mutation frequency analysis showed that guide RNA injections led to efficient mutagenesis in all the targeted genes (Supplementary Fig. 3d). Reduced hair cell regeneration was detected in the embryos injected with gemin5 guide RNA, however, no alteration in hair cell regeneration was observed in the embryos injected with guide RNA targeting prmt5, wdr77, or clns1a (Supplementary Fig. 3e), suggesting the regeneration deficient phenotype observed in the mutants of the three SMN complex members is independent of snRNP assembly.
The overall neuromast size is smaller after hair cell ablation in mutants with regenerative phenotypes
We examined the neuromast cell patterning in the mutants and control siblings at 2 days post hair cell ablation to see if we could detect a difference in neuromast size in mutants using both transgenic labeling and immunohistochemical staining approaches. Double transgenic labeling of support cells by Tg(tnks1bp1:EGFP) and hair cells by Tg(atoh1a:dTomato) in gemin5 mutants revealed that support cells in the mutant occupied a reduced area likely because of fewer cells and hair cells were fewer when compared to that of the control siblings (Fig. 2a). Whole neuromast labeling using Tg(cldnb:EGFP) showed that the size of the neuromast in the mutant was smaller than that of the control siblings (Fig. 2b). Alkaline phosphatase staining revealed that the structure of lateral line neuromasts were reduced in the mutant (Fig. 2c). Co-staining with anti-hair cell antibody and the nuclear stain DAPI revealed a reduction in the number of hair cells and neuromast cells (Fig. 2d, e).
We also used transgenes and immunohistochemical staining to examine the neuromast cells at 2 days post hair cell ablation in smn1 and gemin3 mutants. Consistent with the results of the gemin5 mutation, mutations in smn1 and gemin3 also caused a reduced area of support cells, impaired regeneration of hair cells and smaller neuromasts (Supplementary Fig. 4). All the data suggest the proliferative capacity in the neuromasts is reduced after injury preventing organ regrowth.
Regenerative-deficient mutants show reduced proliferation after injury
To directly test proliferative capacity of the support cells in the mutant neuromasts, we used an EdU incorporation assay to label the proliferation of neuromast cells after hair cell ablation. Compared to the control siblings, all three mutants possessed a reduced number of EdU-positive cells (Fig. 3), suggesting that after hair cell ablation, the mutants lack the capacity to effectively proliferate either their support cells or mantle cells.
smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 mutations affect the regeneration of multiple tissues
Regeneration of different tissues can be achieved by utilizing a common set of molecular pathways and many genes are pan-regenerative in that they are induced and essential regardless of the specific injured tissue21. Both smn1 and gemin5 genes were involved in regulating the regeneration of multiple tissues including neuromasts, caudal fins, and livers14. To determine whether gemin3 had similar phenotypes, we examined the regeneration of caudal fin and liver in gemin3 mutants. Like in smn1 and gemin5 mutants, we found gemin3 mutations did not alter the normal development of caudal fins or livers (data not shown), however, upon damage the mutant exhibited a deficiency in restoring the damaged tissues as was seen with the other mutants. After caudal fin amputation, the restored fin in the gemin3 mutant was significantly smaller and often missing the pigment gap present in normal tailfins (Fig. 4a, b). Similarly, following chemical-mediated liver ablation in the Tg(fabp10a:CFP-NTR) transgenic background, the gemin3 mutant displayed a clear deficiency in liver regeneration compared to the control siblings (Fig. 4c, d). As a control, gemin6 mutants were also examined for a role in the regeneration of caudal fin and liver. In contrast to the regeneration mutants, gemin6 mutants showed normal regeneration of both the caudal fin and the liver (Supplementary Fig. 5). These data suggest that gemin3, like smn1 and gemin5, is generally involved in regeneration, regardless of the injured tissue.
RNA-Seq reveals shared downstream targets among the genes involved in regeneration
To identify the pathways shared amongst the mutants blocking regeneration, we conducted RNA-Seq using all the mutants from the SMN complex that affected adult survival. We found that smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 clustered together while all of the mutations not resulting in a regeneration phenotype failed to cluster with any other gene (Fig. 5a), suggesting the function of the genes without a regeneration phenotype are more divergent than that of the regeneration genes. The regeneration genes regulated a common set of downstream targets which were distinct from the mutants that did not affect regeneration (Supplementary Fig. 6, Supplementary Data 1). We found erbb2 and erbb3b, two genes with a documented role in neuromast hair cell formation28,29, were upregulated in the three non-regenerative mutants (Fig. 5b, c). RNA-Seq data also identified an increase in expression for tp53 and mdm2 genes specifically in the mutants inhibiting regeneration (Supplementary Fig. 7a). In addition, RNA-Seq data showed that a mutation in one of the “regeneration genes” had no effect on the expression of the other two genes (Supplementary Fig. 8), suggesting there is no inter-regulation between the genes at the transcriptional level.
Observed upregulation of the tp53/Mdm2 pathway was not the major cause of the regeneration phenotype
Several lines of published evidence indicate that p53 interacts with and regulates Mdm2, and activation of tp53 is associated with SMN complex activity and SMA30,31,32. Our RNA-Seq data showed a regeneration-associated upregulation of both the tp53 and mdm2 genes (Supplementary Fig. 7a). To investigate a potential role for the tp53/Mdm2 pathway in hair cell regeneration, we depleted tp53 genetically in both the smn1 and gemin5 mutant backgrounds. For the gemin5 study, we crossed the gemin5 mutant with the tp53 M214K mutation33, and found that the gemin5/tp53 double mutants showed no improvement in regeneration or adult survival when compared to the gemin5 mutant alone (Supplementary Fig. 7b, data not shown). For the smn1 mutation, the tp53 and smn1 genes in zebrafish were both on chromosome 5, so we obtained double mutants carrying homozygous mutations for an smn1 2 bp insertion and a tp53 7 bp deletion, by injecting smn1 CRISPR guide RNAs into embryos harboring a homozygous 7 bp tp53 deletion mutation34 and raised those fish for inbreeding. Consistent with the results of the gemin5/tp53 double mutant, tp53 mutants did not rescue the regeneration deficiency or the adult survival of smn1 mutants (data not shown).
RNA-Seq data showed that Mdm2 was also significantly induced in gemin3, gemin5, and smn1 mutants. Since mdm2 mutations cause early embryonic lethality, we created a partial knockdown of Mdm2 by injecting mdm2 CRISPR guide RNAs into the gemin5 mutant background and found the resulting mosaic mutations in mdm2 showed no rescue of hair cell regeneration in the gemin5 mutants (data not shown). Altogether, these data indicate that despite strong induction of tp53 and mdm2 in all three mutants blocking regeneration, the tp53/Mdm2 pathway is not a major contributor to the observed regeneration phenotype although it does suggest that all three genes are involved in a common subset of pathways not shared by the other SMN complex proteins, and those pathways are involved in both injury responses and tp53 stress responses.
Regeneration-deficient mutants are less sensitive to the ErbB pathway inhibitor AG1478
RNA-Seq analysis revealed an upregulation of erbb3b in the three regeneration-deficient mutants (Fig. 5b). To investigate whether the ErbB pathway was associated with the hair cell regeneration deficiency, we performed a pharmacological inhibition using a well-established ErbB pathway inhibitor, AG1478, on gemin5 mutants. Since the RNA-Seq data were obtained from analyzing whole larval tissue and the regeneration phenotypes were manifested in the lateral line neuromasts, we examined the impact of perturbating other pathways that were enriched in the RNA-Seq data analysis and/or have a documented role in neuromast cell proliferation (Supplementary Table 3). Most conditions were negative, with only AG1478 showing a specific phenotype. Treatment with 2 µM AG1478 caused a dramatic increase in lateral line neuromasts of control siblings (as predicted), but only a mild increase in the gemin5 mutant larvae (Fig. 6a, b, Supplementary Fig. 9a), indicating that the gemin5 mutant is resistant to ErbB pathway inhibition. To determine whether the reduced sensitivity was common to all three regeneration gene mutations, we treated smn1 and gemin3 mutants with AG1478. Consistent with the findings from the gemin5 mutant, the smn1 mutant and the gemin3 mutants also showed a reduced responsiveness to AG1478 (Fig. 6c, d). To test if the ErbB pathway responded normally in the other mutants of the complex, we treated gemin6 mutants with AG1478. In contrast to the mutants that disrupted regeneration, the gemin6 mutant responded to AG1478 comparable to that of their control siblings (Fig. 6e). Altogether, these results point out that the inability to respond to AG1478 inhibition specifically in the mutants that inhibited regeneration, suggesting a mechanistic link between the loss of regeneration and ErbB signaling.
We observed a down-regulation of erbb3b and an upregulation of erbb2 in the gemin2 mutant (Fig. 5b, c). To examine whether ErbB signaling is altered in gemin2 mutants, we analyzed the neuromast formation under natural conditions and under ErbB pathway inhibition. Neither condition revealed a difference between the control siblings and gemin2 mutants (Supplementary Fig. 9b), suggesting ErbB signaling in gemin2 mutant is normal.
Neuromast cell proliferation is not induced by AG1478 in gemin5 mutants
To understand why gemin5 mutants responded differently to AG1478, we used wild-type embryos with a double transgene Tg(pou4f3:GAP-GFP);(SqET20:EGFP) to label neuromast cells, and used an EdU incorporation assay to mark proliferating cells. We exposed the double transgenic embryos either to a mock treatment or to AG1478, and the resulting embryos were stained with the nuclear dye DAPI. In each neuromast, DAPI labeled all neuromast cells, Tg(pou4f3:GAP-GFP) labeled hair cells, Tg(SqET20:EGFP) labeled mantle cells that demarcate the outer periphery of neuromasts, and the GFP negative and DAPI-positive cells in between were the support cells. Quantification results showed that AG1478 promoted the proliferation of all three types of neuromast cells in wild-type larvae (Supplementary Fig. 9c, d), consistent with previous finding that AG1478 promotes cell proliferation35.
When AG1478 was applied to gemin5 embryos possessing the same Tg(pou4f3:GAP-GFP);(SqET20:EGFP) transgenes, gemin5 mutants possessed a significantly reduced number of neuromast hair cells (as visualized by Tg(pou4f3:GAP-GFP)) and mantle cells (as visualized by Tg(SqET20:GFP)) (Fig. 6f), indicating that the gemin5 mutation impaired neuromast cell proliferation in response to ErbB inhibition.
Several studies have indicated that AG1478 regulates neuromast cell proliferation through modulating the cell signaling activity between the Schwann cells, interneuromast cells, and the axons via Wnt35,36,37,38. We tested whether we could detect disruptions in Schwann cells in gemin5 mutant embryos. Schwann cell morphology and quantity were evaluated using the Tg(foxd3:GFP) transgene or by the expression of myelin basic protein a (mbpa). Neither revealed a noticeable difference between the control siblings and mutants (Supplementary Fig. 10a, b). Lateral line axons were labeled with an antibody targeting acetylated tubulin and appeared to be comparable between the control and mutant embryos (Supplementary Fig. 10c). Wnt pathway activity was manipulated with both the Wnt pathway activator BIO and the inhibitor IWR1. Neither showed any differences between the mutant and control siblings (Supplementary Table 3). Altogether these data suggest the disruptions in myelination by the Schwann cells was not associated with the failure of AG1478 to induce supernumerary neuromasts in the gemin5 mutant.
Genetic mutations of ErbB pathway genes recapitulate the AG1478 effect
Similar to inhibition by AG1478, mutations in ErbB pathway genes, such as erbb2, erbb3b, and nrg1, lead to an increase in lateral line neuromasts35,37,38. Mutations in erbb3b and nrg1 appear to have no other significant impact on embryo axis patterning nor on adult survival. We therefore generated stable genetic mutations for both erbb3b and nrg1 and compared the effect of these mutations to the AG1478 effect on lateral line neuromast formation. As expected, both erbb3b and nrg1 mutations caused a dramatic increase in the number of lateral line neuromasts, however, the increase was consistently lower than that of AG1478 treatment (Fig. 7a, b), suggesting AG1478 inhibits ErbB signaling more broadly than that mediated by either erbb3b or nrg1 alone and that there may be some redundant signaling from other related genes.
We then examined how mutations of the genes in the ErbB pathway impact neuromast formation in the gemin5 mutant background. We generated double mutants of erbb3b/gemin5 or nrg1/gemin5. Consistent with our previous observations, a homozygous mutation in either erbb3b or nrg1 alone caused an increase in the number of neuromasts, a homozygous mutation for gemin5 alone caused no alteration, and a heterozygous mutation of either gene alone or together produced no change (Fig. 7c, d). Both double mutants displayed a lower level of increase of lateral line neuromasts when compared to erbb3b or nrg1 mutant, however, the number of neuromasts in the double mutants was significantly higher when compared to the gemin5 mutant alone, indicating disruption of the ErbB pathway could partially rescue the deficiency of neuromast formation in the mutant. The partial rescue in the double mutants suggests that AG1478 was failing to sufficiently inhibit ErbB signaling in gemin5 mutants instead of the alternative explanation that interneuromast cells were unable to respond properly to release of ErbB signaling.
Rescue was also attempted by mutating the erbb2 gene in the gemin5 mutant background. Since erbb2 loss of function is early embryonically lethal, we generated a mosaic knockdown of erbb2 by injecting multiple CRISPR guide RNAs into the embryos from a gemin5 heterozygous incross, and then used the injected embryos to quantify lateral line neuromast formation. Mutation frequency analysis showed these erbb2 CRISPR guide RNAs resulted in a near-complete mutagenesis of the erbb2 gene (Fig. 7e). Neuromast number quantification showed the erbb2 knockdown promoted more neuromasts than that of gemin5 mutant (Fig. 7f).
ErbB pathway inhibition partially rescues hair cell regeneration
Activation of ErbB signaling has been implicated in the regeneration of other tissues29,39, so we investigated whether ErbB pathway inhibition could improve hair cell regeneration in the three mutants that disrupt regeneration. In performing the hair cell regeneration assay in the presence of the ErbB inhibitor, AG1478 had no obvious effect on the regeneration of hair cells in control siblings, however, it did exhibit a dose-dependent rescue of regeneration in all three mutants (Fig. 8). Our interpretation of the data from Figs. 7 and 8 is that ErbB signaling in the smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 mutants was hyperactive, such that the increased ErbB activity was blocking AG1478 induction of ectopic neuromasts. Similarly, too much ErbB signaling was blocking the initiation of hair cell regeneration, but now AG1478 inhibition was sufficient to partially release the block in regeneration, presumably because ErbB-signaling levels were generally lower in the regenerating neuromast compared to the interneuromast cells, or the level of reduction needed to see rescue was lower in the case of hair cell regeneration compared to neuromast induction.
Discussion
Our previous large-scale mutagenesis screen showed smn1 and gemin5, two SMN complex members, were essential for tissue regeneration14. In this study, we expanded our mutagenesis screen to systematically examine the potential role of each of the nine members of the SMN complex in tissue regeneration. Consistent with the findings reported from other groups40,41,42, we found that mutations in most SMN complex members were essential for adult survival (Supplementary Table 2). However, our genetic data suggest the nine SMN complex members can be categorized into three separate groups: smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 are required for both overall survival and regeneration after injury; gemin2, gemin4, gemin6, and gemin7 are required for survival but not for regeneration; gemin8 and strap/unrip appear to be non-essential for either regeneration or survival. The three regeneration members (smn1, gemin3, and gemin5) are regulating regeneration through ErbB pathway-mediated cell proliferation, and they are essential for regeneration of multiple (if not all) tissues.
Studies of the SMN complex have been ongoing for more than two decades43 with the largest focus on SMN1 because mutations in this gene are responsible for the human disease SMA1,2. However, the association of SMN complex members with tissue regeneration was not recognized until our prior study14 and expanded here. Our work strongly suggests that some of the SMN complex members have separate, independent functions unrelated to snRNP assembly, or that the complex may not have a single cellular function that always requires all nine subunits in stochiometric balance. For example, we found transcripts were not expressed uniformly and ubiquitously, but expression varied in different brain regions and in different neuromast cells (Supplementary Fig. 2). However, no additive or synergistic interactions were observed between the three genes involved in regeneration (Supplementary Fig. 3). All three regeneration members functioned through ErbB-pathway-mediated cell proliferation (Figs. 6, 8), all three possessed an ability to regulate regeneration in multiple tissues (Fig. 4)14, and none of the three appeared to be epistatic to the other two. All these findings argue that these regenerative members work together in a shared molecular mechanism. Our findings suggest that the three SMN complex members involved in regeneration possess functions separate from snRNP biosynthesis that are essential for tissue regeneration and are also related to tp53 regulation/activation, although our genetic evidence in these two functions are not directly related.
In line with our findings, previous studies have reported apparently independent activities of SMN complex members. For example, SMN1 regulates ribosome biology and motor neuron growth5,44,45, SMN1’s function in motor neurons appears to be independent of snRNP biosynthesis46, and SMN1 has a specific role in axonal mRNA regulation and axonogenesis7,8. Furthermore, GEMIN3, an RNA helicase, is involved in cell proliferation and microRNA regulation of signal transduction9. Gemin5 regulates smn1 expression25, Gemin5’s C-terminus can regulate protein synthesis10,12,47,48, and Gemin5 is strongly stimulated upon viral infection11. Future studies should be able to evaluate SMN complex-dependent and independent functions more precisely through detailed analysis of splicing isoforms in different genes and/or cell types, under natural, diseased, or regenerative conditions.
In this study, we demonstrated a link between the ErbB pathway and three of the SMN complex’s proteins. RNA-Seq data revealed an increased expression of the ErbB pathway genes erbb2 and erbb3b in smn1, gemin3, and gemin5 mutants (Fig. 5b, c), both chemical inhibition of the ErbB pathway with AG1748 and genetic ablation of erbb3b or nrg1 were able to partially rescue the neuromast induction and hair cell regeneration (Figs. 6–8), demonstrating the ErbB pathway was hyperactive in the mutants. Because the ErbB pathway is associated with various neurological diseases49, it suggests future investigation is warranted to address whether the upregulation of the ErbB pathway in the three SMN mutants is specific to injury responses or if it is also one of the underlying mechanisms in the neurodegenerative pathology of SMA.
Several studies have demonstrated that the ErbB pathway plays a promotive role in the regeneration of other tissues. For example, mutations in erbb2 or erbb3 cause a deficiency in caudal fin regeneration29, and AG1478 treatment inhibits the regenerative proliferation of cardiomyocytes39. Our data indicate that the role of the ErbB pathway in regeneration differs based on tissue type. It remains unclear how the ErbB signaling is properly integrated into the different roles it plays in different tissues.
We found that inhibition of ErbB pathway contributes to a partial rescue of their regeneration phenotype (Fig. 8). The partial rescue, consistent with the RNA-Seq data (Fig. 5. Supplementary Fig. 6), suggests that the ErbB pathway is, at least in part, the underlying mechanism for the deficient regeneration, and likely it is only one of many pathways affected during the regeneration. It is possible that this dysregulation of ErbB signaling is also responsible for some of the pathologies seen in SMA patients, suggesting that one possible treatment could be inhibitors of ErbB signaling. Besides erbb3b, p53, and mdm2 were also upregulated (Supplementary Fig. 7a). The p53/Mdm2 pathway has been documented to interact with the SMN complex. tp53 has a direct physical interaction with both SMN1 and Gemin332,50 and tp53 depletion rescues mdm2 mutant phenotypes30. Abnormal mdm2 splicing and p53 activation are associated with the death of motor neurons in SMA31. We found inhibition of the tp53/Mdm2 pathway brought no alteration to survival or regeneration in the gemin5 or smn1 mutants (Supplementary Fig. 7, data not shown), suggesting this pathway is not the major cause of the mutant regeneration phenotypes.
Despite the well-established role of the SMN complex in pre-mRNA splicing, the number of mis-splicing events detected in the RNA-Seq dataset were relatively limited (Supplementary data 2). It suggests that depleting a single member of the SMN complex does not fully abolish the complex activity. Consistent with this idea, the formation of sub-complexes containing some but not all SMN complex members has been observed51,52. The RNA-Seq samples were collected at 7 dpf, a time prior to the manifestation of obvious morphological phenotypes. The significant regeneration deficiency detected at this time in the mutants of the three SMN complex members argues that the regeneration phenotype is not solely attributed to the splicing function of the SMN complex, in line with the observation that knockdown of the PRMT5 complex members had no effect on regeneration (Supplementary Fig. 3d, e). Studies on splicing genes and their associated human diseases have brought forth clear evidence on the noncanonical role of splicing factors in translation regulation53,54,55. Taken into consideration that both SMN1 and GEMIN5 have a documented role in translational control and GEMIN5 has been shown to regulate smn1 expression5,10,25, it is reasonable to speculate that the regeneration phenotype of the three SMN complex members, even the disease SMA, could be associated with post-transcriptional roles of these proteins. Supporting this speculation is that SMA is also associated with mutations in uba1, a gene involved in protein ubiquitination56,57.
In conclusion, this study provides insight into the SMN complex and potential roles for the complex in wound healing and ErbB signaling. Although SMN1 is the causative gene in the majority of SMA patients, there are still cases of SMA where the causative gene is unknown. Because we see phenotypes cluster with smn1, gemin3, and gemin5, it is possible that a fraction of undiagnosed SMA cases or related neurodegenerative diseases could be caused by variants in either GEMIN3 or GEMIN5. It is also possible that the functions of the three SMN complex members outside of snRNP assembly are somehow linked to SMA pathology and deficient regeneration is an underlying mechanism for SMA and even for other neurological diseases.
Methods
Zebrafish husbandry and embryology
Zebrafish husbandry and embryo staging were performed according to Kimmel58. All experiments were in compliance with NIH guidelines for animal handling and research and approved by the NHGRI Animal Care and Use Committee (protocol G-01-3). Adult fish survival was examined at 3 months post fertilization. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) was conducted by extracting total RNA with Trizol (Invitrogen, Cat#: 15596026), synthesizing cDNA with SuperScript first-strand synthesis system (Thermo Fisher Scientific. Cat#: 11904018), and then running qPCR with SYBR™ Green PCR Master Mix (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Cat#: 4344463). Beta-actin was used as an internal reference. Semi-qPCR analysis was conducted similarly as qPCR except no use of SYBR Green and amplicons analyzed on an agarose gel. CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis was performed as previously described59. For studying the effect of erbb2, gemin5, clns1a, wdr77, and prmt5 knockdown on regeneration, Cas9 protein (New England Biolabs. Cat#: M0646T) was co-injected with multiple guide RNAs targeting a single exon of each gene to increase mutation frequency. Mutation rate was detected by a pair of primers flanking the guide RNA targets. The CRISPR targets and primers used for mutation detection are listed in the CRISPRz database60 https://research.nhgri.nih.gov/CRISPRz/). CRISPR mutation rates for founder embryos were analyzed by calculating the percentage of mutant signal over the total signal61.
Biological materials and the zebrafish transgenic lines
The biological dyes used in this study were: Yopro-1 (Life Technologies. Cat#: Y3603), ProLong Gold Antifade Mountant with DAPI (Vector Laboratories. Cat#: H1200). Chemical compounds used in this study were all purchased from Sigma: copper sulfate (C1297), antimycin A (A8674), cycloheximide (C7698), AG1478 (T4182), DAPT (D5942), dexamethasone (D4902), prednisolone (P6004), 1-azakenpaullone (A3734), BIO (B1686), IWR1 (I0161), SU5402 (SML0443), SB505124 (S4696), H2O2 (216763), NAC (A7250), and GSH (G4251). All chemicals except NAC and GSH were dissolved in DMSO. NAC and GSH were dissolved in embryo media 1x Holtfreter’s buffer. Chemical treatments were carried out in embryo media, with the doses and durations listed in Supplementary Table 3. Mock treatments were carried out by adding an equal amount of the corresponding solvents. The zebrafish transgenic lines used were: Tg(atoh1a:dTomato)nns8 62, Tg(tnks1bp1:EGFP)63, Tg(clndb:GFP)zf106 64, Tg(pou4f3:GAP-GFP)s273t 65. Tg(SqET20:EGFP)66, Tg(foxd3:GFP)zf15 67, Tg(fabp10a:CFP-NTR)s931 68. Imaging of the transgenic embryos was conducted using either an inverted Zeiss Axiophot or a Zeiss LSM 880 confocal microscope.
Hair cell and neuromast quantification
Hair cell staining and quantification were as described69. Briefly, for analyzing hair cell development, embryos from heterozygotic incrosses were cultured until 5 dpf, and then placed in a cell strainer (BD Falcon) for staining with 2 µM YoPro-1 for 30 min. Lateral line neuromasts P1, P2, P4, and P5 in each embryo were used for hair cell counting using an inverted Zeiss Axiophot. The number of neuromasts in the lateral line of each embryo was also counted for studying neuromast formation. For hair cell regeneration analysis, embryos from heterozygotic incrosses at 5 dpf were treated with the ototoxin copper sulfate at 10 µM for 2 h except when otherwise indicated, recovered for 48 h, and then counted for the regenerated hair cells in the lateral line neuromasts P1, P2, P4, and P5. Approximately 40 embryos were used for each of the analyses except when otherwise indicated. The average number of hair cells and the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.) are shown in the graphs.
Immunohistochemical staining
Hair cell staining for fixed zebrafish tissues was performed with a combination of antibodies against hair cell soma-1 (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank. Cat#: HCS-1, 1 μg/ml) and myosin-VIIa (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank. Cat#: 138-1, 1 μg/ml), followed by an Alexa 488-labeled secondary antibody (Invitrogen. Cat#: A11001, 4 μg/ml). Alkaline phosphatase staining for lateral line neuromasts was performed as previously reported35. Lateral line axons were stained with an antibody against acetylated tubulin (Sigma. Cat#: T7451, 1:1000 dilution) and a secondary antibody conjugated with Alexa 594 (Invitrogen. Cat#: A11012, 4 μg/ml). Proliferating cells were labeled with the Click-It EdU Alexa Fluor 594 Imaging Kit (Life Science. Cat#: C10339), following the manufacturer’s instructions. Embryos were prepared by exposure to 500 µM of EdU in 1x Holtfreter’s buffer with 15% DMSO in an ice bath for 30 minutes, recovered for 3 h, and then fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde overnight. The stained embryos were mounted with ProLong Gold Antifade Mountant with DAPI on a microscope slide and imaged with a Zeiss LSM 880 confocal microscope. The neuromast images were then used for EdU-positive cell quantification. For the smn1 mutation, neuromasts were additionally labeled by Tg(cldnb:GFP). For the gemin5 mutation, neuromasts were additionally labeled by Tg(tnks1bp1:EGFP).
Quantifying development and regeneration of caudal fin
Caudal fin development and regeneration were analyzed as previously described14. In brief, embryos were obtained from a pair of heterozygous parents. Fin development was measured at 5 dpf, using the posterior of pigment gap as a positional reference. For the regeneration analysis, amputation was performed at 3 dpf, at the posterior end of ventral pigment break. The regeneration was measured at 7 dpf, continuing to use the anterior end of pigment gap as a positional reference. ImageJ was used for quantifying the fin areas. All analyzed embryos were genotyped. Graph shows the mean and s.e.m., based on the quantification data from ~10 embryos per genotype.
Quantification of development and regeneration of liver
Liver development and regeneration were tested using the transgene Tg(fabp10a:CFP-NTR)68. The embryos used for the analysis were the CFP-positive embryos obtained from a pair of parents with one carrying the heterozygous gene mutation and the other carrying both the heterozygous mutation and an allele of Tg(fabp10a:CFP-NTR). Liver size was measured at 5 dpf. For liver regeneration analysis, the embryos were treated with 10 mM metronidazole for 1.5 days at 3 dpf and analyzed for regeneration at 7 dpf. All analyzed embryos were imaged at a lateral view with head facing right under a Zeiss Axiophot fluorescent microscope, and afterwards genotyped. ImageJ was used to measure the liver areas. Approximately 45 CFP-positive embryos were used for each analysis. Graph shows the mean and s.e.m.
RNA-Seq analysis
The embryos used for RNA-Seq were produced from a cross of a single pair of heterozygous parents, exposed to 10 μM copper sulfate for 2 h at 5 dpf, and then subjected to caudal fin biopsy for genotyping and the body stored in Qiazol (Qiagen. Cat#: 79306) at 7 dpf. Afterwards the wild-type and homozygous mutant embryos were pooled together and used for total RNA extraction by using Qiagen miRNeasy Mini Kit (Cat#: 217004). The total RNA with an integrity score (RIN) over 9 were used for RNA-Seq analysis. For the RNA-Seq data analysis, reads were mapped to the reference genome (GRCz10, Ensembl release 91, without pseudogenes) using STAR v2.6.1c with the default settings. Expression abundance was estimated using RSEM. Differentially expressed genes were identified using R package “DESeq2” for either the wildtype-mutant pair or all the samples combined. We defined a gene S1-up (or G3-up, G5-up) when it was significantly (fdr < 0.05) up-regulated in the regeneration gene mutants S1 (or G3, G5) and not significantly (p ≥ 0.1 and fdr ≥ 0.25) in any of the non-regeneration gene mutants and the log2-fold change is not greater than log2(fold change of S1)−0.2 (or G3,G5). We defined a gene S1-down when it was significantly down-regulated in the regeneration gene mutants S1 (or G3, G5) and not in any of the non-regeneration gene mutants and the log2-fold change is not greater than log2(fold change of S1) + 0.2 (or G3, G5). We labeled these S1/G3/G5-up/down genes as the regeneration-associated up/down genes. The regeneration-associated genes were then used for KEGG pathway, gene ontology, and InterPro analysis (Fisher’s exact test FDR < 0.05). Gene set enrichment analysis was implemented for each wildtype-mutant pair. Gene sets with odds ratio > 1 and (FDR > 0.1 or P-value > 0.01) in any of S1, G3, G5 wildtype-mutant pair but less significant in all of G2, G4, G6, G7 pairs were labeled as the enriched gene sets. Gene sets with fewer than 10 or more than 500 genes or with the regeneration-associated genes fewer than 3 were removed.
Statistical analyses
A Student t-test (two tailed) was used for comparison between two samples. One-way ANOVA was used when comparing multiple samples. A difference was considered significant when P value was <0.05. Dotted box plot graphs were made using R. Center lines indicate the median. Asterisks and short lines were used to indicate a significant difference between two groups. ns, P ≥ 0.05; *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001. Each experiment presented was repeated at least twice, with the replicates showing statistical significance each time.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
All RNA-seq data deposited to GEO under access number: GSE134187. Sequence and mutagenic activity of all sgRNA CRISPR guides used in this study available at the CRISPRz database https://research.nhgri.nih.gov/CRISPRz/.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank MaryPat Jones, Blake Carrington, Kevin Bishop and Raman Sood from the NHGRI Zebrafish Core for mutation genotyping; Suiyuan Zhang from the NHGRI Bioinformatics Core for CRISPRz database management; Alisha Beirl and Katie Kindt from the NIDCD for mechanistic studies; Daniel Green, Justin Frye, Jason Frye, Hillary Mahon, Paulina Capar, and Justin Glover in Charles River for fish care; and the members of Burgess laboratory for helpful discussion. We have complied with all relevant ethical regulations regarding animal use and all animal experiments were approved by the National Human Genome Research Institute’s Animal Care and Use Committee (protocol #G-01-3). This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Human Genome Research Institute (ZIAHG200386-06).
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W.P. and S.M.B. designed the study. W.P., L.X., C.C.S., and K.P.P. performed zebrafish experiments. Z.C. conducted bioinformatics analysis. S.W. assisted with confocal imaging. NISC Comparative Sequencing Program performed RNA-Seq. W.P. and S.M.B. prepared the manuscript. All authors approved the submission of the manuscript.
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Pei, W., Xu, L., Chen, Z. et al. A subset of SMN complex members have a specific role in tissue regeneration via ERBB pathway-mediated proliferation. npj Regen Med 5, 6 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41536-020-0089-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41536-020-0089-0
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