Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6261880 Brain Research Bulletin 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ATP13A2 is a lysosome-specific transmembrane ATPase protein of unknown function. This protein was initially linked to Kufor-Rakeb syndrome where it is absent or mutated. More recently, point mutations in ATP13A2 were linked to familial cases of Parkinson's disease.Zebrafish is commonly used as a vertebrate model for the study of different neurodegenerative diseases and has homologues of several Parkinson's disease associated proteins.Here, we describe for the first time the zebrafish homologue of human ATP13A2, demonstrating the homology between the protein sequences, which supports a conserved biological role. Furthermore, the spatial pattern of protein expression was studied and the lethality of the knockdown of ATP13A2 suggests it plays a crucial role during embryonic development. Our findings bring new insight into the biology of ATP13A2 and open novel opportunities for its study using zebrafish as a model organism.

► We describe the zebrafish homologue of the Parkinson's disease gene ATP13A2. ► Expression of ATP13A2 is focused in the brain throughout zebrafish embryonic development. ► ATP13A2 is crucial for embryonic development as its knockdown is lethal. ► Partial abrogation of expression resulted in anatomical defects and movement alterations.

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