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Cellular analysis of SOD1 protein-aggregation propensity and toxicity: a case of ALS with slow progression harboring homozygous SOD1-D92G mutation

Authors :
60852423
10378771
70332327
20534340
90216771
Sawamura, Masanori
Imamura, Keiko
Hikawa, Rie
Enami, Takako
Nagahashi, Ayako
Yamakado, Hodaka
Ichijo, Hidenori
Fujisawa, Takao
Yamashita, Hirofumi
Minamiyama, Sumio
Kaido, Misako
Wada, Hiromi
Urushitani, Makoto
Inoue, Haruhisa
Egawa, Naohiro
Takahashi, Ryosuke
60852423
10378771
70332327
20534340
90216771
Sawamura, Masanori
Imamura, Keiko
Hikawa, Rie
Enami, Takako
Nagahashi, Ayako
Yamakado, Hodaka
Ichijo, Hidenori
Fujisawa, Takao
Yamashita, Hirofumi
Minamiyama, Sumio
Kaido, Misako
Wada, Hiromi
Urushitani, Makoto
Inoue, Haruhisa
Egawa, Naohiro
Takahashi, Ryosuke
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Mutations within Superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), accounting for approximately 20% of familial cases. The pathological feature is a loss of motor neurons with enhanced formation of intracellular misfolded SOD1. Homozygous SOD1-D90A in familial ALS has been reported to show slow disease progression. Here, we reported a rare case of a slowly progressive ALS patient harboring a novel SOD1 homozygous mutation D92G (homD92G). The neuronal cell line overexpressing SOD1-D92G showed a lower ratio of the insoluble/soluble fraction of SOD1 with fine aggregates of the misfolded SOD1 and lower cellular toxicity than those overexpressing SOD1-G93A, a mutation that generally causes rapid disease progression. Next, we analyzed spinal motor neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) of a healthy control subject and ALS patients carrying SOD1-homD92G or heterozygous SOD1-L144FVX mutation. Lower levels of misfolded SOD1 and cell loss were observed in the motor neurons differentiated from patient-derived iPSCs carrying SOD1-homD92G than in those carrying SOD1-L144FVX. Taken together, SOD1-homD92G has a lower propensity to aggregate and induce cellular toxicity than SOD1-G93A or SOD1-L144FVX, and these cellular phenotypes could be associated with the clinical course of slowly progressive ALS.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1458643978
Document Type :
Electronic Resource