Reversing lysosome-ribosome circuit dysregulation mitigates C9FTD/ALS neurodegeneration and behaviors.
Li MaChen LiangJing WangQing ChangYuan WangWei ZhangYuanning DuJotham SadanJian-Fu ChenPublished in: Human molecular genetics (2022)
G4C2 repeat expansion in C9orf72 causes the most common familial frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (C9FTD/ALS). The pathogenesis includes haploinsufficiency of C9orf72, which forms a protein complex with Smcr8, as well as G4C2 repeat-induced gain-of-function including toxic dipeptide repeats (DPRs). The key in vivo disease-driving mechanisms and how loss- and gain-of-function interplay remain poorly understood. Here we identified a lysosome-ribosome biogenesis circuit dysregulation as an early and key disease mechanism using a physiologically relevant mouse model with combined loss- and gain-of-function across the ageing process. C9orf72 deficiency exacerbates FTD/ALS-like pathologies and behaviors in C9ORF72 bacterial artificial chromosome (C9-BAC) mice with G4C2 repeats under endogenous regulatory elements from patients. Single nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) and bulk RNA-seq revealed that C9orf72 depletion disrupts lysosomes in neurons and leads to transcriptional dysregulation of ribosomal protein (RP) genes, which are likely due to the proteotoxic stress response and resemble ribosomopathy defects. Importantly, ectopic expression of C9orf72 or its partner Smcr8 in C9FTD/ALS mutant mice promotes lysosomal functions and restores ribosome biogenesis gene transcription, resulting in the mitigation of DPR accumulation, neurodegeneration, as well as FTD/ALS-like motor and cognitive behaviors. Therefore, we conclude that loss- and gain-of-function crosstalk in C9FTD/ALS converges on neuronal dysregulation of a lysosome-ribosome biogenesis circuit leading to the proteotoxicity, neurodegeneration, and behavioral defects.
Keyphrases
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- rna seq
- single cell
- mouse model
- genome wide
- end stage renal disease
- transcription factor
- chronic kidney disease
- fluorescent probe
- high fat diet induced
- binding protein
- gene expression
- copy number
- spinal cord
- living cells
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- climate change
- radiation therapy
- oxidative stress
- protein protein
- insulin resistance
- dna methylation
- human immunodeficiency virus
- wild type
- drug induced
- radiation induced
- hiv infected
- endothelial cells
- peritoneal dialysis