| 2014 |
TUBA4A mutants (identified in familial ALS patients) destabilize the microtubule network and diminish its repolymerization capability, as demonstrated by functional microtubule repolymerization assays in cells expressing ALS-associated TUBA4A variants. |
Microtubule repolymerization assay in cells expressing mutant TUBA4A |
Neuron |
High |
25374358
|
| 2018 |
Excess tubulin-folding cofactor B (TBCB) leads to depolymerization and degradation of TUBA4A protein, establishing TBCB as a negative regulator of TUBA4A stability; this pathway (miR-1825/TBCB/TUBA4A) was confirmed in brain cortex tissue of ALS patients and caused motor axon defects in an in vivo model. |
Combined transcriptomic and proteomic analysis, protein-level validation in patient brain tissue, in vivo zebrafish/motor axon model |
Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS |
High |
30030593
|
| 2021 |
A TUBA4A variant associated with familial FTD showed decreased TUBA4A protein abundance and disrupted α-tubulin function in a microtubule repolymerization assay; FTD-associated variants appear more localized to the N-terminus compared to ALS-associated variants, suggesting distinct pathogenic mechanisms. |
Immunoblotting, microtubule repolymerization assay |
Neurology. Genetics |
Medium |
34169147
|
| 2022 |
An N-terminal frameshift mutation in TUBA4A (p.Arg64Glyfs*90) produces mutant mRNA but no detectable truncated protein, and leads to decreased total TUBA4A mRNA and protein levels, indicating loss-of-function/haploinsufficiency as a pathogenic mechanism for N-terminal TUBA4A mutations, distinct from the dominant-negative mechanism proposed for C-terminal mutations. |
qPCR, immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry |
Biomolecules |
Medium |
35327632
|
| 2023 |
In silico molecular dynamics modeling of ALS-associated TUBA4A mutations (e.g., K430N, R215C, W407X) predicts structural deviations that impair GTP binding and destabilize tubulin polymerization; mutations R320C and K430N also significantly increase predicted aggregation propensity of TUBA4A relative to wild-type. |
Molecular dynamics simulation, molecular docking |
Scientific reports |
Low |
36747013
|
| 2024 |
Knockdown of the zebrafish TUBA4A orthologue via antisense morpholino induced motor axonopathy and disturbed motor behavior in a dose-dependent manner; these phenotypes were rescued by addition of human wild-type TUBA4A mRNA, demonstrating functional conservation. Additionally, loss of TUBA4A caused significant changes in post-translational modifications of tubulin including acetylation, detyrosination, and polyglutamylation. |
Antisense morpholino knockdown in zebrafish, mRNA rescue, immunostaining of motor axons, motor behavior assay, antibody-based detection of tubulin PTMs |
Frontiers in cellular neuroscience |
High |
38463699
|
| 2024 |
The TUBA4A missense variant p.L227F causes cytoplasmic aggregation of TUBA4A protein that colocalizes with ubiquitin when overexpressed in a cellular model, and is associated with focal myofibrillar disorganization and rimmed vacuoles in patient muscle; immunofluorescence showed ubiquitin-positive TUBA4A aggregates in affected muscle fibres. |
Overexpression in cellular model, immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry of patient muscle biopsy |
Journal of medical genetics |
Medium |
38413182
|
| 2024 |
Cultured fibroblasts from patients with distinct TUBA4A missense variants showed significant alterations in microtubule organization and dynamics, providing experimental evidence for pathogenicity of these variants. |
Microtubule organization/dynamics assay in patient-derived fibroblasts |
Brain : a journal of neurology |
Medium |
38884572
|
| 2025 |
Multiple TUBA4A missense variants identified in patients with primary myopathy cause TUBA4A protein accumulation and proteinopathy (including autophagic features) in patient myofibres; in vitro investigations indicate that these substitutions cause significant protein abnormalities and differentially impact microtubule dynamics; domain specificity within TUBA4A influences both muscle involvement pattern and extent of microtubule disruption. |
Immunohistochemistry of patient muscle biopsies, in silico and in vitro microtubule dynamics assays |
Brain : a journal of neurology |
Medium |
41678358
|
| 2026 |
A mouse model carrying the Tuba4a p.Gln176Pro missense mutation (ENU-confirmed by CRISPR engineering) develops ataxia, Purkinje neuron degeneration, and skeletal muscle defects with dominant inheritance, but does not show motor neuron degeneration, demonstrating cell-type-selective consequences of this TUBA4A mutation in vivo. |
ENU mutagenesis screen, genetic mapping, CRISPR knock-in confirmation, neuropathological and behavioral analysis |
bioRxivpreprint |
Medium |
41889878
|
| 2011 |
A missense mutation in the mouse Tuba1 gene (encoding TUBA1/TUBA4A ortholog; aspartate to glycine substitution) causes behavioral abnormalities including hyperactivity and inattention to novel objects, with abnormal brain development, establishing a neurodevelopmental role for this α-tubulin in vivo. |
ENU mutagenesis, behavioral testing, brain morphological analysis, pharmacological challenge |
Behavioural brain research |
Medium |
22101068
|