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Coenzyme A corrects pathological defects in human neurons of PANK2-associated neurodegeneration

Authors :
Sonia Levi
Stefano Taverna
Maurizio Ferrari
Vania Broccoli
Valeria Tiranti
Serena Giannelli
Paolo Santambrogio
Paola Venco
Barbara Garavaglia
Daniel Orellana
Latefa Yekhlef
Anna Cozzi
Sabrina Dusi
Alicia Rubio
Cinzia Cancellieri
Pietro G. Mazzara
Orellana, Daniel I
Santambrogio, Paolo
Rubio, Alicia
Yekhlef, Latefa
Cancellieri, Cinzia
Dusi, Sabrina
Giannelli, Serena G
Venco, Paola
Mazzara, Pietro G
Cozzi, Anna
Ferrari, Maurizio
Garavaglia, Barbara
Taverna, Stefano
Tiranti, Valeria
Broccoli, Vania
Levi, Sonia
Levi, SONIA MARIA ROSA
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Pantothenate kinase‐associated neurodegeneration (PKAN) is an early onset and severely disabling neurodegenerative disease for which no therapy is available. PKAN is caused by mutations in PANK2 , which encodes for the mitochondrial enzyme pantothenate kinase 2. Its function is to catalyze the first limiting step of Coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis. We generated induced pluripotent stem cells from PKAN patients and showed that their derived neurons exhibited premature death, increased ROS production, mitochondrial dysfunctions—including impairment of mitochondrial iron‐dependent biosynthesis—and major membrane excitability defects. CoA supplementation prevented neuronal death and ROS formation by restoring mitochondrial and neuronal functionality. Our findings provide direct evidence that PANK2 malfunctioning is responsible for abnormal phenotypes in human neuronal cells and indicate CoA treatment as a possible therapeutic intervention.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d170f4b4e42392bdba7c942a24f6765