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Astroglial toxicity promotes synaptic degeneration in the thalamocortical circuit in frontotemporal dementia with GRN mutations

Authors :
Elise Marsan
Dmitry Velmeshev
Arren Ramsey
Ravi K. Patel
Jiasheng Zhang
Mark Koontz
Madeline G. Andrews
Martina de Majo
Cristina Mora
Jessica Blumenfeld
Alissa N. Li
Salvatore Spina
Lea T. Grinberg
William W. Seeley
Bruce L. Miller
Erik M. Ullian
Matthew F. Krummel
Arnold R. Kriegstein
Eric J. Huang
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation, vol 133, iss 6
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2023.

Abstract

Mutations in the human progranulin (GRN) gene are a leading cause of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). While previous studies implicate aberrant microglial activation as a disease-driving factor in neurodegeneration in the thalamocortical circuit in Grn-/- mice, the exact mechanism for neurodegeneration in FTLD-GRN remains unclear. By performing comparative single-cell transcriptomics in the thalamus and frontal cortex of Grn-/- mice and patients with FTLD-GRN, we have uncovered a highly conserved astroglial pathology characterized by upregulation of gap junction protein GJA1, water channel AQP4, and lipid-binding protein APOE, and downregulation of glutamate transporter SLC1A2 that promoted profound synaptic degeneration across the two species. This astroglial toxicity could be recapitulated in mouse astrocyte-neuron cocultures and by transplanting induced pluripotent stem cell-derived astrocytes to cortical organoids, where progranulin-deficient astrocytes promoted synaptic degeneration, neuronal stress, and TDP-43 proteinopathy. Together, these results reveal a previously unappreciated astroglial pathology as a potential key mechanism in neurodegeneration in FTLD-GRN.

Details

ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
133
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82f196309a3bb8d5e1c83e0eabf72c75
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci164919