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Combined Dendritic and Axonal Deterioration Are Responsible for Motoneuronopathy in Patient-Derived Neuronal Cell Models of Chorea-Acanthocytosis

Authors :
Arun Pal
Peter Reinhardt
Jared Sterneckert
Alexander Storch
Patrick Neumann
Andreas Hermann
Hannes Glaß
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 21, Iss 5, p 1797 (2020), International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 21, Issue 5, International journal of molecular sciences 21(5), 1797-(2020). doi:10.3390/ijms21051797
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Chorea acanthocytosis (ChAc), an ultra-rare devastating neurodegenerative disease, is caused by mutations in the VPS13A gene, which encodes for the protein chorein. Affected patients suffer from chorea, orofacial dyskinesia, epilepsy, parkinsonism as well as peripheral neuropathy. Although medium spinal neurons of the striatum are mainly affected, other regions are impaired as well over the course of the disease. Animal studies as well as studies on human erythrocytes suggest Lyn-kinase inhibition as valuable novel opportunity to treat ChAc. In order to investigate the peripheral neuropathy aspect, we analyzed induced pluripotent stem cell derived midbrain/hindbrain cell cultures from ChAc patients in vitro. We observed dendritic microtubule fragmentation. Furthermore, by using in vitro live cell imaging, we found a reduction in the number of lysosomes and mitochondria, shortened mitochondria, an increase in retrograde transport and hyperpolarization as measured with the fluorescent probe JC-1. Deep phenotyping pointed towards a proximal axonal deterioration as the primary axonal disease phenotype. Interestingly, pharmacological interventions, which proved to be successful in different models of ChAc, were ineffective in treating the observed axonal phenotypes. Our data suggests that treatment of this multifaceted disease might be cell type and/or neuronal subtype specific, and thus necessitates precision medicine in this ultra-rare disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14220067
Volume :
21
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cdf7ab5af61fb2ad4cf9e368c019d96b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21051797