4.6 Article

The Energy Status of Astrocytes Is the Achilles' Heel of eIF2B-Leukodystrophy

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10081858

Keywords

astrocytes; eIF2B-leukodystrophy; translation regulation; impaired mitochondria function; energy stress; oxidative stress; ROS; AMPK; mTOR

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Funding

  1. VWMD families

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The mutation in eIF2B has a significant impact on astrocytes, affecting their metabolism and redox balance. Mutant astrocytes show hypersensitivity to oxidative and energy stresses, as well as migration deficits under glucose starvation.
Translation initiation factor 2B (eIF2B) is a master regulator of global protein synthesis in all cell types. The mild genetic Eif2b5(R132H) mutation causes a slight reduction in eIF2B enzymatic activity which leads to abnormal composition of mitochondrial electron transfer chain complexes and impaired oxidative phosphorylation. Previous work using primary fibroblasts isolated from Eif2b5((R132H/R132H)) mice revealed that owing to increased mitochondrial biogenesis they exhibit normal cellular ATP level. In contrast to fibroblasts, here we show that primary astrocytes isolated from Eif2b5((R132H/R132H)) mice are unable to compensate for their metabolic impairment and exhibit chronic state of low ATP level regardless of extensive adaptation efforts. Mutant astrocytes are hypersensitive to oxidative stress and to further energy stress. Moreover, they show migration deficit upon exposure to glucose starvation. The mutation in Eif2b5 prompts reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated inferior ability to stimulate the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) axis, due to a requirement to increase the mammalian target of rapamycin complex-1 (mTORC1) signalling in order to enable oxidative glycolysis and generation of specific subclass of ROS-regulating proteins, similar to cancer cells. The data disclose the robust impact of eIF2B on metabolic and redox homeostasis programs in astrocytes and point at their hyper-sensitivity to mutated eIF2B. Thereby, it illuminates the central involvement of astrocytes in Vanishing White Matter Disease (VWMD), a genetic neurodegenerative leukodystrophy caused by homozygous hypomorphic mutations in genes encoding any of the 5 subunits of eIF2B.

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