Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

April 1, 2021

Journal

Science advances

Volume/Issue

7/15

ISSN

2375-2548

A hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the gene is the most common genetic cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). How this mutation leads to these neurodegenerative diseases remains unclear. Here, we show using patient stem cell-derived motor neurons that the repeat expansion impairs microtubule-based transport, a process critical for neuronal survival. Cargo transport defects are recapitulated by treating neurons from healthy individuals with proline-arginine and glycine-arginine dipeptide repeats (DPRs) produced from the repeat expansion. Both arginine-rich DPRs similarly inhibit axonal trafficking in adult neurons in vivo. Physical interaction studies demonstrate that arginine-rich DPRs associate with motor complexes and the unstructured tubulin tails of microtubules. Single-molecule imaging reveals that microtubule-bound arginine-rich DPRs directly impede translocation of purified dynein and kinesin-1 motor complexes. Collectively, our study implicates inhibitory interactions of arginine-rich DPRs with axonal transport machinery in -associated ALS/FTD and thereby points to potential therapeutic strategies.

Alternate Journal

Sci Adv

PubMed ID

33837088

PubMed Central ID

PMC8034861

Authors

Laura Fumagalli
Florence L Young
Steven Boeynaems
Mathias De Decker
Arpan R Mehta
Ann Swijsen
Raheem Fazal
Wenting Guo
Matthieu Moisse
Jimmy Beckers
Lieselot Dedeene
Bhuvaneish T Selvaraj
Tijs Vandoorne
Vanesa Madan
Marka van Blitterswijk
Denitza Raitcheva
Alexander McCampbell
Koen Poesen
Aaron D Gitler
Philipp Koch
Pieter Vanden Berghe
Dietmar Rudolf Thal
Catherine Verfaillie
Siddharthan Chandran
Ludo Van Den Bosch
Simon L Bullock
Philip Van Damme

Keywords

Arginine
Drosophila
Axonal Transport
Dipeptides
Humans
C9orf72 Protein
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Frontotemporal Dementia
DNA Repeat Expansion
Microtubules
Motor Neurons
Animals