4.8 Article

S-nitrosylated TDP-43 triggers aggregation, cell-to-cell spread, and neurotoxicity in hiPSCs and in vivo models of ALS/FTD

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2021368118

Keywords

TDP-43 proteinopathy; S-nitrosylation; aggregation; spread

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 NS086890, DP1 DA041722, R01 DA048882, RF1 AG057409, R01 AG056259, R01 AG061845, P41 GM103533, NS103172, HG004659]
  2. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation
  3. Michael J. Fox Foundation
  4. TargetALS
  5. ALS Association

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This study reveals that environmentally induced nitrosative stress can trigger protein aggregation and cell-to-cell spread, leading to abnormal aggregation of TDP-43 in ALS/FTD. These processes also interfere with neuronal function, contributing to the progression of the diseases.
Rare genetic mutations result in aggregation and spreading of cognate proteins in neurodegenerative disorders; however, in the absence of mutation (i.e., in the vast majority of sporadic cases), mechanisms for protein misfolding/aggregation remain largely unknown. Here, we show environmentally induced nitrosative stress triggers protein aggregation and cell-to-cell spread. In patient brains with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)/frontotemporal dementia (FTD), aggregation of the RNA-binding protein TDP-43 constitutes a major component of aberrant cytoplasmic inclusions. We identify a pathological signaling cascade whereby reactive nitrogen species cause S-nitrosylation of TDP-43 (forming SNO-TDP-43) to facilitate disulfide linkage and consequent TDP-43 aggregation. Similar pathological SNO-TDP-43 levels occur in postmortem human FTD/ALS brains and in cell-based models, including human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons. Aggregated TDP-43 triggers additional nitrosative stress, representing positive feed forward leading to further SNO-TDP-43 formation and disulfide-linked oligomerization/aggregation. Critically, we show that these redox reactions facilitate cell spreading in vivo and interfere with the TDP-43 RNA-binding activity, affecting SNMT1 and phospho-(p)CREB levels, thus contributing to neuronal damage in ALS/FTD disorders.

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