4.8 Article

Autophagy inhibition rescues structural and functional defects caused by the loss of mitochondrial chaperone Hsc70-5 in Drosophila

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 3160-3174

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2020.1871211

Keywords

Atg1; Hsc70-5; microtubule; mitochondria; mitophagy; rapamycin; synapse

Categories

Funding

  1. Fritz Thyssen Foundation [10.12.1.192]
  2. Parkinson's UK [H1201]
  3. Hertie Foundation
  4. Chica and Heinz Schaller Foundation
  5. Max Planck Society

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The loss of the mitochondrial chaperone Hsc70-5 in Drosophila models led to synaptic dysfunction, resulting in pathological alterations similar to Parkinson's disease. Adult flies exhibited ATP depletion, altered body posture, and increased susceptibility to heat-induced paralysis, which could be suppressed by knocking down certain proteins.
We investigated in larval and adult Drosophila models whether loss of the mitochondrial chaperone Hsc70-5 is sufficient to cause pathological alterations commonly observed in Parkinson disease. At affected larval neuromuscular junctions, no effects on terminal size, bouton size or number, synapse size, or number were observed, suggesting that we studied an early stage of pathogenesis. At this stage, we noted a loss of synaptic vesicle proteins and active zone components, delayed synapse maturation, reduced evoked and spontaneous excitatory junctional potentials, increased synaptic fatigue, and cytoskeleton rearrangements. The adult model displayed ATP depletion, altered body posture, and susceptibility to heat-induced paralysis. Adult phenotypes could be suppressed by knockdown of dj-1 beta, Lrrk, DCTN2-p50, DCTN1-p150, Atg1, Atg101, Atg5, Atg7, and Atg12. The knockdown of components of the macroautophagy/autophagy machinery or overexpression of human HSPA9 broadly rescued larval and adult phenotypes, while disease-associated HSPA9 variants did not. Overexpression of Pink1 or promotion of autophagy exacerbated defects.

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