Language

English

Publication Date

7-15-2025

Journal

eLife

DOI

10.7554/eLife.95324

PMID

40662934

PMCID

PMC12263152

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-15-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Idiopathic scoliosis (IS) is the most common form of spinal deformity with unclear pathogenesis. In this study, we first reanalyzed the loci associated with IS, drawing upon previous studies. Subsequently, we mapped these loci to candidate genes using either location-based or function-based strategies. To further substantiate our findings, we verified the enrichment of variants within these candidate genes across several large IS cohorts encompassing Chinese, East Asian, and European populations. Consequently, we identified variants in the EPHA4 gene as compelling candidates for IS. To confirm their pathogenicity, we generated zebrafish mutants of epha4a. Remarkably, the zebrafish epha4a mutants exhibited pronounced scoliosis during later stages of development, effectively recapitulating the IS phenotype. We observed that the epha4a mutants displayed defects in left-right coordination during locomotion, which arose from disorganized neural activation in these mutants. Our subsequent experiments indicated that the disruption of the central pattern generator (CPG) network, characterized by abnormal axon guidance of spinal cord interneurons, contributed to the disorganization observed in the mutants. Moreover, when knocked down efnb3b, the ligand for Epha4a, we observed similar CPG defects and disrupted left-right locomotion. These findings suggested that ephrin B3-Epha4 signaling is vital for the proper functioning of CPGs, and defects in this pathway could lead to scoliosis in zebrafish. Furthermore, we identified two cases of IS in NGEF, a downstream molecule in the EPHA4 pathway. Collectively, our data provide compelling evidence that neural patterning impairments and disruptions in CPGs may underlie the pathogenesis of IS.

Keywords

Animals, Zebrafish, Receptor, EphA4, Scoliosis, Signal Transduction, Locomotion, Zebrafish Proteins, Humans, Mutation, Human, Zebrafish

Published Open-Access

yes

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