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Publisher Correction: Spermine synthase deficiency causes lysosomal dysfunction and oxidative stress in models of Snyder-Robinson syndrome

Authors :
William A. Gahl
May Christine V. Malicdan
Yi Zhu
Hongbo Wang
Lauren Cascio
Christofer Bello
Rini Pauly
Chong Li
Marie Morimoto
Zoraida Diaz-Perez
Sha Liu
Luigi Boccuto
Jennifer M. Brazill
Cornelius F. Boerkoel
R. Grace Zhai
Charles E. Schwartz
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-1 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Polyamines are tightly regulated polycations that are essential for life. Loss-of-function mutations in spermine synthase (SMS), a polyamine biosynthesis enzyme, cause Snyder-Robinson syndrome (SRS), an X-linked intellectual disability syndrome; however, little is known about the neuropathogenesis of the disease. Here we show that loss of dSms in Drosophila recapitulates the pathological polyamine imbalance of SRS and causes survival defects and synaptic degeneration. SMS deficiency leads to excessive spermidine catabolism, which generates toxic metabolites that cause lysosomal defects and oxidative stress. Consequently, autophagy–lysosome flux and mitochondrial function are compromised in the Drosophila nervous system and SRS patient cells. Importantly, oxidative stress caused by loss of SMS is suppressed by genetically or pharmacologically enhanced antioxidant activity. Our findings uncover some of the mechanisms underlying the pathological consequences of abnormal polyamine metabolism in the nervous system and may provide potential therapeutic targets for treating SRS and other polyamine-associated neurological disorders.<br />Mutations in spermine synthase lead to Snyder-Robinson syndrome, a form of intellectual disability syndrome. Here the authors develop a Drosophila model of this disease, and show that lysosomal dysfunction and oxidative stress contribute to the morphological phenotype in these flies, as well as to cellular deficits in cells derived from patients.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3c5b98b8035a564a03935d66f22857ba