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Loss or Gain of Function Mutations in ACOX1 Cause Axonal Loss Via Different Mechanisms

Authors :
Jill A. Rosenfeld
Mitchell J Herndon
Hyunglok Chung
Sina Sadeghzadeh
Soe Mar
Hyun Kyung Lee
Shan Chen
Carlos E. Prada
Brendan Lee
Robert E. Schmidt
Paul C. Marcogliese
Marissa Vawater-Lee
Thomas Ravenscoft
Alan Pestronk
Hugo J. Bellen
Lindsay C. Burrage
Amelle Shillington
Murim Choi
Michael F. Wangler
Shinya Yamamoto
Jackeline Rodriguez-Smith
Robert C. Bucelli
Taekyeong Yoo
Ann B. Moser
Richard Jones
Michael Henrickson
Juyeon Jo
Tiphanie P. Vogel
Lita Duraine
Robert J. Hopkin
David Li-Kroeger
Jong-Hee Chae
Source :
SSRN Electronic Journal.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

ACOX1 (acyl-CoA oxidase 1) encodes the first and rate-limiting enzyme in very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) β-oxidation in peroxisomes and produces H2O2. Unexpectedly, dACOX1 is mostly expressed and required in glia, and its loss in flies leads to developmental delay and pupal death. Flies that escape death exhibit a severely reduced lifespan, impaired synaptic transmission, and pronounced glial and axonal loss. Patients who carry a previously unidentified, de novo, heterozygous variant in ACOX1 (p.N237S) also exhibit axonal loss. However, this mutation causes increased levels of ACOX1 and reactive oxygen species in insulating glia in flies and Schwann cells in mice. Similarly, ACOX1 (p.N237S) patients exhibit a severe loss of Schwann cells, motor and sensory neurons. Treatment of flies, primary Schwann cells and a patient with an anti-oxidant suppresses these phenotypes. In summary, both loss and gain-of ACOX1 leads to glial and neuronal loss, but via different mechanisms and require different treatments.

Details

ISSN :
15565068
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SSRN Electronic Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........67c471f96390e179508bf93a543ad13b