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Frontotemporal Dementia-Like Disease Progression Elicited by Seeded Aggregation and Spread of FUS

Authors :
Vazquez-Sanchez, Sonia
Tilkin, Britt
Gasset-Rosa, Fatima
Zhang, Sitao
Piol, Diana
McAlonis-Downes, Melissa
Artates, Jonathan
Govea-Perez, Noe
Verresen, Yana
Guo, Lin
Cleveland, Don
Shorter, James
Da Cruz, Sandrine
Vazquez-Sanchez, Sonia
Tilkin, Britt
Gasset-Rosa, Fatima
Zhang, Sitao
Piol, Diana
McAlonis-Downes, Melissa
Artates, Jonathan
Govea-Perez, Noe
Verresen, Yana
Guo, Lin
Cleveland, Don
Shorter, James
Da Cruz, Sandrine
Source :
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

RNA binding proteins have emerged as central players in the mechanisms of many neurodegenerative diseases. In particular, a proteinopathy of fused in sarcoma (FUS) is present in some instances of familial Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and about 10% of sporadic Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). Here we establish that focal injection of sonicated human FUS fibrils into brains of mice in which ALS-linked mutant or wild-type human FUS replaces endogenous mouse FUS is sufficient to induce focal cytoplasmic mislocalization and aggregation of mutant and wild-type FUS which with time spreads to distal regions of the brain. Human FUS fibril-induced FUS aggregation in the mouse brain of humanized FUS mice is accelerated by an ALS-causing FUS mutant relative to wild-type human FUS. Injection of sonicated human FUS fibrils does not induce FUS aggregation and subsequent spreading after injection into naìˆve mouse brains containing only mouse FUS, indicating a species barrier to human FUS aggregation and its prion-like spread. Fibril-induced human FUS aggregates recapitulate pathological features of FTLD including increased detergent insolubility of FUS and TAF15 and amyloid-like, cytoplasmic deposits of FUS that accumulate ubiquitin and p62, but not TDP-43. Finally, injection of sonicated FUS fibrils is shown to exacerbate age-dependent cognitive and behavioral deficits from mutant human FUS expression. Thus, focal seeded aggregation of FUS and further propagation through prion-like spread elicits FUS-proteinopathy and FTLD-like disease progression.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1453151656
Document Type :
Electronic Resource