Neuronal deletion of Wwox, associated with WOREE syndrome, causes epilepsy and myelin defects

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Abstract

WWOX-related epileptic encephalopathy (WOREE) syndrome caused by human germline bi-allelic mutations in WWOX is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by intractable epilepsy, severe developmental delay, ataxia and premature death at the age of 2-4 years. The underlying mechanisms of WWOX actions are poorly understood. In the current study, we show that specific neuronal deletion of murine Wwox produces phenotypes typical of the Wwox-null mutation leading to brain hyperexcitability, intractable epilepsy, ataxia and postnatal lethality. A significant decrease in transcript levels of genes involved in myelination was observed in mouse cortex and hippocampus. Wwox-mutant mice exhibited reduced maturation of oligodendrocytes, reduced myelinated axons and impaired axonal conductivity. Brain hyperexcitability and hypomyelination were also revealed in human brain organoids with a WWOX deletion. These findings provide cellular and molecular evidence for myelination defects and hyperexcitability in the WOREE syndrome linked to neuronal function of WWOX.

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Repudi, S., Steinberg, D. J., Elazar, N., Breton, V. L., Aquilino, M. S., Saleem, A., … Aqeilan, R. I. (2021). Neuronal deletion of Wwox, associated with WOREE syndrome, causes epilepsy and myelin defects. Brain, 144(10), 3061–3077. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab174

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