A patient-based model of RNA mis-splicing uncovers treatment targets in Parkinson's disease.
Ibrahim BoussaadCarolin D ObermaierZoé HanssDheeraj R BobbiliSilvia BologninEnrico GlaabKatarzyna WołyńskaNicole WeisschuhLaura De ContiCaroline MayFlorian GiesertDajana GrossmannAnnika M LambertSusanne KirchenMaria BiryukovLena F BurbullaFrançois MassartJill BohlerGérald CrucianiBenjamin SchmidAnnerose Kurz-DrexlerPatrick MayStefano DugaChristine KleinJens Christian SchwambornKatrin MarcusDirk WoitallaDaniela Maria Vogt WeisenhornWolfgang WurstMarco BaralleDimitri KraincThomas GasserBernd WissingerRejko KrügerPublished in: Science translational medicine (2021)
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder with monogenic forms representing prototypes of the underlying molecular pathology and reproducing to variable degrees the sporadic forms of the disease. Using a patient-based in vitro model of PARK7-linked PD, we identified a U1-dependent splicing defect causing a drastic reduction in DJ-1 protein and, consequently, mitochondrial dysfunction. Targeting defective exon skipping with genetically engineered U1-snRNA recovered DJ-1 protein expression in neuronal precursor cells and differentiated neurons. After prioritization of candidate drugs, we identified and validated a combinatorial treatment with the small-molecule compounds rectifier of aberrant splicing (RECTAS) and phenylbutyric acid, which restored DJ-1 protein and mitochondrial dysfunction in patient-derived fibroblasts as well as dopaminergic neuronal cell loss in mutant midbrain organoids. Our analysis of a large number of exomes revealed that U1 splice-site mutations were enriched in sporadic PD patients. Therefore, our study suggests an alternative strategy to restore cellular abnormalities in in vitro models of PD and provides a proof of concept for neuroprotection based on precision medicine strategies in PD.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- single cell
- protein protein
- late onset
- case report
- induced apoptosis
- newly diagnosed
- spinal cord
- brain injury
- cell proliferation
- cancer therapy
- oxidative stress
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- cell therapy
- binding protein
- spinal cord injury
- single molecule
- smoking cessation
- pi k akt