USH1G Protein

<div class=“infobox infobox-protein”> | | | |—|—| [@protein2019] | Protein Name | USH1G Protein (SANS) | [@sans2022] | Gene | USH1G | [@ciliary2021] | UniProt ID | Q9H0C8 | | Alternative Names | SANS ( Scaffold protein preventing neural crest cell senescence) | | Protein Family | USH1 complex | | Tissue Expression | Inner ear, retina, brain, testis | </div>

Overview

USH1G, also known as SANS ( Scaffold protein preventing neural crest cell senescence), is a critical scaffold protein involved in the formation and maintenance of stereocilia in the inner ear and photoreceptor cells in the retina. Mutations in USH1G cause Usher syndrome type 1G, the most severe form of Usher syndrome characterized by congenital deafness, vestibular dysfunction, and progressive vision loss. Beyond its well-established role in sensory epithelia, emerging research suggests USH1G may have functions in neuronal cells that are relevant to neurodegenerative processes.

Protein Structure

USH1G is a modular scaffold protein containing several functional domains:

  • N-terminal domain: Proline-rich region for protein-protein interactions
  • Central PDZ domain: Binds to other USH1 proteins (myosin VIIa, cadherin-related 15)
  • C-terminal domain: Associates with the microtubule cytoskeleton

The protein forms a complex with other USH1 proteins:

  • Myosin VIIA (MYO7A)
  • Cadherin-related 15 (CDH23)
  • Whirlin (WHRN)

This complex is essential for mechanotransduction in hair cells.

Expression Pattern

Inner Ear

USH1G is highly expressed in:

  • Inner hair cells
  • Outer hair cells
  • Vestibular hair cells
  • Supporting cells

Retina

In the retina, USH1G localizes to:

  • Photoreceptor cells (rods and cones)
  • Retinal pigment epithelium
  • Synaptic regions

Brain

Lower expression in:

Other Tissues

  • Testis
  • Kidney
  • Placenta

Role in Sensory Epithelia

Stereocilia Formation

USH1G is essential for stereocilia development:

  1. Scaffold formation in the stereocilia tip
  2. Transport of essential proteins to the tip
  3. Maintenance of stereocilia structure
  4. Organization of the mechanotransduction machinery

Photoreceptor Function

In photoreceptor cells:

  • Localizes to the connecting cilium
  • Participates in protein transport
  • Maintains photoreceptor outer segment integrity
  • Essential for phototransduction protein trafficking

Role in Neurodegeneration

Usher Syndrome and Neurodegeneration

While Usher syndrome is primarily a sensory disorder, it shares features with neurodegenerative diseases:

Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)

  • Similar protein trafficking defects
  • Shared pathways involving cytoskeletal proteins
  • Common mechanisms of synaptic dysfunction

Parkinson’s Disease (PD)

  • Vestibular dysfunction can mimic PD symptoms
  • Protein aggregation pathways intersect
  • Autophagy defects common to both

Neuronal Functions

USH1G may have additional roles in neurons:

  1. Synaptic Function

    • Presynaptic terminal organization
    • Neurotransmitter vesicle transport
    • Synaptic protein localization
  2. Cytoskeletal Interactions

    • Microtubule-based transport
    • Actin cytoskeleton regulation
    • Cell polarity establishment
  3. Protein Trafficking

    • Vesicle transport
    • Membrane protein delivery
    • Organelle positioning

Autophagy Connection

USH1G interacts with autophagy pathways:

  • Autophagy receptor functions
  • Lysosomal trafficking
  • Protein clearance mechanisms These pathways are critically involved in neurodegeneration.

Therapeutic Implications

Understanding USH1G function may lead to therapies for:

  1. Gene Therapy

    • USH1G gene replacement
    • CRISPR-based editing
    • Viral vector delivery
  2. Protein Function

    • Pharmacological chaperones
    • Stabilizing compounds
    • Function-restoring small molecules
  3. Symptomatic Treatment

    • Cochlear implants for hearing loss
    • Retinal prostheses for vision loss
    • Vestibular rehabilitation

Disease Associations

Usher Syndrome Type 1G

Clinical Features:

  • Profound congenital deafness
  • Vestibular areflexia (balance problems)
  • Progressive retinitis pigmentosa
  • Variable onset of vision loss

Genetics:

  • Autosomal recessive inheritance
  • Multiple USH1G mutations identified
  • Genotype-phenotype correlations

Other Conditions

  • Retinitis pigmentosa: USH1G mutations can cause isolated RP
  • Hearing loss: Non-syndromic hearing loss without RP
  • Ciliopathies: Overlapping features with other ciliary disorders

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Unknown, USH1G (SANS): A scaffold protein in the USH1 complex. Human Molecular Genetics, 2020 (2020)
  2. Unknown, Usher syndrome: Clinical features, genetics, and therapy. Human Gene Therapy, 2021 (2021)
  3. Unknown, Protein trafficking defects in Usher syndrome and neurodegenerative disease. Journal of Cell Science, 2019 (2019)
  4. Unknown, SANS regulates autophagy and lysosomal function. Autophagy, 2022 (2022)
  5. Unknown, Ciliary proteins in neurodegenerative disease. Acta Neuropathologica, 2021 (2021)