Dipeptide Repeat Proteins (DPRs) in C9orf72-ALS/FTD
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Dipeptide Repeat Proteins (DPRs) in C9orf72-ALS/FTD
Overview
Dipeptide repeat proteins (DPRs) are aberrant protein products generated by repeat-associated non-AUG (RAN) translation of the expanded GGGGCC (G4C2) hexanucleotide repeat in the C9orf72 gene. This repeat expansion is the most common genetic cause of both ALS and FTD, accounting for approximately 40% of familial ALS and 25% of familial FTD cases. DPRs represent a gain-of-function toxicity mechanism distinct from the C9orf72 loss-of-function and RNA foci pathology also caused by the expansion.
Five distinct DPR species are produced from sense and antisense transcription of the repeat, each with different biochemical properties and toxicity profiles. Understanding DPR biology has revealed fundamental insights into nucleocytoplasmic transport, proteostasis, and selective neuronal vulnerability in ALS/FTD. [@ash2013]
RAN Translation Mechanism
Non-canonical Translation
RAN translation is a non-canonical form of protein synthesis that occurs without the standard AUG initiation codon: [@kwon2014]
```mermaid graph TD A["C9orf72 G4C2 Repeat Expansion<br/>(Hundreds to thousands of repeats)"] A --> B["Sense Transcription (5'->3')"] A --> C["Antisense Transcription (3'->5')"]
B --> D["Sense RNA<br/>(GGGGCC)n"] C --> E["Antisense RNA<br/>(CCCCGG)n"]
D --> F["RNA G-quadruplex and<br/>Hairpin Structures"] E --> G["RNA Secondary<br/>Structures"]
F --> H["RAN Translation<br/>Three Reading Frames"] G --> I["RAN Translation<br/>Two Reading Frames"]
...
Dipeptide Repeat Proteins (DPRs) in C9orf72-ALS/FTD
Overview
Dipeptide repeat proteins (DPRs) are aberrant protein products generated by repeat-associated non-AUG (RAN) translation of the expanded GGGGCC (G4C2) hexanucleotide repeat in the C9orf72 gene. This repeat expansion is the most common genetic cause of both ALS and FTD, accounting for approximately 40% of familial ALS and 25% of familial FTD cases. DPRs represent a gain-of-function toxicity mechanism distinct from the C9orf72 loss-of-function and RNA foci pathology also caused by the expansion.
Five distinct DPR species are produced from sense and antisense transcription of the repeat, each with different biochemical properties and toxicity profiles. Understanding DPR biology has revealed fundamental insights into nucleocytoplasmic transport, proteostasis, and selective neuronal vulnerability in ALS/FTD. [@ash2013]
RAN Translation Mechanism
Non-canonical Translation
RAN translation is a non-canonical form of protein synthesis that occurs without the standard AUG initiation codon: [@kwon2014]
Mermaid diagram (expand to render)
Repeat transcription: Both sense and antisense strands of the expanded G4C2 repeat are transcribed into RNA
RNA structure formation: Repeat-containing RNAs form stable G-quadruplex and hairpin structures
RAN initiation: These RNA structures enable ribosome engagement and translation initiation without a canonical AUG start codon
Three-frame translation: Translation occurs in all three reading frames from sense RNA and two frames from antisense RNA
DPR production: Five dipeptide repeat proteins are produced, each a repetitive polymer of two amino acids
The Five DPR Species
Poly-GA (Glycine-Alanine) — Sense Strand
Most abundant DPR species in patient tissue
Forms p62-positive, TDP-43-negative cytoplasmic inclusions