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From the Cover: Mutations in mouse Aspm (abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated) cause not only microcephaly but also major defects in the germline
Authors:Jeremy N. Pulvers  Jaros?aw Bryk  Jennifer L. Fish  Michaela Wilsch-Br?uninger  Yoko Arai  Dora Schreier  Ronald Naumann  Jussi Helppi  Bianca Habermann  Johannes Vogt  Robert Nitsch  Attila Tóth  Wolfgang Enard  Svante P??bo  Wieland B. Huttner
Affiliation:aMax Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, 01307 Dresden, Germany;;bMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany;;cInstitute for Cell Biology and Neurobiology, Center for Anatomy, Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, 10115 Berlin, Germany; and;dInstitute of Physiological Chemistry, Technische Universität Dresden, 01307 Dresden, Germany
Abstract:Mutations in ASPM (abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated) cause primary microcephaly in humans, a disorder characterized by a major reduction in brain size in the apparent absence of nonneurological anomalies. The function of the Aspm protein in neural progenitor cell expansion, as well as its localization to the mitotic spindle and midbody, suggest that it regulates brain development by a cell division-related mechanism. Furthermore, evidence that positive selection affected ASPM during primate evolution has led to suggestions that such a function changed during primate evolution. Here, we report that in Aspm mutant mice, truncated Aspm proteins similar to those causing microcephaly in humans fail to localize to the midbody during M-phase and cause mild microcephaly. A human ASPM transgene rescues this phenotype but, interestingly, does not cause a gain of function. Strikingly, truncated Aspm proteins also cause a massive loss of germ cells, resulting in a severe reduction in testis and ovary size accompanied by reduced fertility. These germline effects, too, are fully rescued by the human ASPM transgene, indicating that ASPM is functionally similar in mice and humans. Our findings broaden the spectrum of phenotypic effects of ASPM mutations and raise the possibility that positive selection of ASPM during primate evolution reflects its function in the germline.
Keywords:evolution   cerebral cortex   fertility   neural stem cells   germ cells
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