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GBA mutation promotes early mitochondrial dysfunction in 3D neurosphere models

20

Citations

35

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Glucocerebrosidase (<i>GBA</i>) mutations are the most important genetic risk factor for the development of Parkinson disease (PD). <i>GBA</i> encodes the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase (GCase). Loss-of-GCase activity in cellular models has implicated lysosomal and mitochondrial dysfunction in PD disease pathogenesis, although the exact mechanisms remain unclear. We hypothesize that <i>GBA</i> mutations impair mitochondria quality control in a neurosphere model.We have characterized mitochondrial content, mitochondrial function and macroautophagy flux in 3D-neurosphere-model derived from neural crest stem cells containing heterozygous and homozygous <i><sub>N370S</sub>GBA</i> mutations, under carbonyl cyanide-m-chlorophenyl-hydrazine (CCCP)- induced mitophagy.Our findings on mitochondrial markers and ATP levels indicate that mitochondrial accumulation occurs in mutant <i><sub>N370S</sub>GBA</i> neurospheres under basal conditions, and clearance of depolarised mitochondria is impaired following CCCP-treatment. A significant increase in TFEB-mRNA levels, the master regulator of lysosomal and autophagy genes, may explain an unchanged macroautophagy flux in <i><sub>N370S</sub>GBA</i> neurospheres. PGC1α-mRNA levels were also significantly increased following CCCP-treatment in heterozygote, but not homozygote neurospheres, and might contribute to the increased mitochondrial content seen in cells with this genotype, probably as a compensatory mechanism that is absent in homozygous lines.Mitochondrial impairment occurs early in the development of GCase-deficient neurons. Furthermore, impaired turnover of depolarised mitochondria is associated with early mitochondrial dysfunction.In summary, the presence of <i>GBA</i> mutation may be associated with higher levels of mitochondrial content in homozygous lines and lower clearance of damaged mitochondria in our neurosphere model.

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