Publication | Open Access
Increased cholesterol synthesis drives neurotoxicity in patient stem cell-derived model of multiple sclerosis
21
Citations
70
References
2024
Year
ImmunologyCell DeathCholesterol SynthesisHmgcr Inhibitor SimvastatinOxidative StressNeuroinflammationInflammationProgressive Multiple SclerosisNeurologyNeuroimmunologyStem CellsAtherosclerosisNeuroprotectionInflammatory SignalingCell BiologyStem Cell ToxicologyStem Cell ResearchNeuroscienceMultiple SclerosisMedicineNeural Stem Cell
Senescent neural progenitor cells have been identified in brain lesions of people with progressive multiple sclerosis (PMS). However, their role in disease pathobiology and contribution to the lesion environment remains unclear. By establishing directly induced neural stem/progenitor cell (iNSC) lines from PMS patient fibroblasts, we studied their senescent phenotype in vitro. Senescence was strongly associated with inflammatory signaling, hypermetabolism, and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). PMS-derived iNSCs displayed increased glucose-dependent fatty acid and cholesterol synthesis, which resulted in the accumulation of lipid droplets. A 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl (HMG)-coenzyme A (CoA) reductase (HMGCR)-mediated lipogenic state was found to induce a SASP in PMS iNSCs via cholesterol-dependent transcription factors. SASP from PMS iNSC lines induced neurotoxicity in mature neurons, and treatment with the HMGCR inhibitor simvastatin altered the PMS iNSC SASP, promoting cytoprotective qualities and reducing neurotoxicity. Our findings suggest a disease-associated, cholesterol-related, hypermetabolic phenotype of PMS iNSCs that leads to neurotoxic signaling and is rescuable pharmacologically.
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