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Haploinsufficiency leads to neurodegeneration in C9ORF72 ALS/FTD human induced motor neurons

Authors :
Gabriel R. Linares
Justin K. Ichida
Yingxiao Shi
Brandon B Ge
Yichen Li
Jacob Komberg
R. Jeroen Pasterkamp
Davide Trotti
Valerie Hennes
Leonard H. van den Berg
Nicole Koutsodendris
Jason A. Chen
Kaitlin P. Sandor
Vamshidhar R. Vangoor
Louise Menendez
Amy R. Nelson
Michael E. Ward
Tze-Yuan Cheng
Yaoming Wang
Phillip E. Woolwine
Wen-Hsuan Chang
Ketharini Senthilkumar
Kim A. Staats
Mickey Huang
Carina Seah
Alice Zhang
Chris Grunseich
Esther Y. Son
Eric Hendricks
Michael J. Cowan
Paul R. August
Kassandra Kisler
Shih Jong J. Lee
Marcelo P. Coba
Shu Ting Hung
Shaoyu Lin
Brent Wilkinson
N. Wisniewski
Berislav V. Zlokovic
Tohru Sugawara
T. Grant Belgard
Victor Hanson-Smith
Xinmei Wen
Source :
Nature Medicine, 24(3), 313. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

An intronic GGGGCC repeat expansion in C9ORF72 is the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), but the pathogenic mechanism of this repeat remains unclear. Using human induced motor neurons (iMNs), we found that repeat-expanded C9ORF72 was haploinsufficient in ALS. We found that C9ORF72 interacted with endosomes and was required for normal vesicle trafficking and lysosomal biogenesis in motor neurons. Repeat expansion reduced C9ORF72 expression, triggering neurodegeneration through two mechanisms: accumulation of glutamate receptors, leading to excitotoxicity, and impaired clearance of neurotoxic dipeptide repeat proteins derived from the repeat expansion. Thus, cooperativity between gain- and loss-of-function mechanisms led to neurodegeneration. Restoring C9ORF72 levels or augmenting its function with constitutively active RAB5 or chemical modulators of RAB5 effectors rescued patient neuron survival and ameliorated neurodegenerative processes in both gain- and loss-of-function C9ORF72 mouse models. Thus, modulating vesicle trafficking was able to rescue neurodegeneration caused by the C9ORF72 repeat expansion. Coupled with rare mutations in ALS2, FIG4, CHMP2B, OPTN and SQSTM1, our results reveal mechanistic convergence on vesicle trafficking in ALS and FTD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Medicine, 24(3), 313. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6a7b18c3fd3677e0457e409e74f97ed0