4.6 Article

Lysosomal Proteomics Links Disturbances in Lipid Homeostasis and Sphingolipid Metabolism to CLN5 Disease

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11111840

Keywords

NCL; CLN5 disease; lysosomes; lysosomal proteomics; trehalose; miglustat

Categories

Funding

  1. project DEM-AGING
  2. Ministry of University and Research of Italy
  3. Biocenter Finland

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This study reveals the key role of lysosomes and lipid metabolism in CLN5 disease through proteomics analysis and functional validation. It also identifies NCL biomarkers with high lysosomal confidence. Furthermore, the findings are validated in a zebrafish model and the therapeutic effects of two FDA-approved drugs are evaluated.
CLN5 disease (MIM: 256731) represents a rare late-infantile form of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL), caused by mutations in the CLN5 gene that encodes the CLN5 protein (CLN5p), whose physiological roles stay unanswered. No cure is currently available for CLN5 patients and the opportunities for therapies are lagging. The role of lysosomes in the neuro-pathophysiology of CLN5 disease represents an important topic since lysosomal proteins are directly involved in the primary mechanisms of neuronal injury occurring in various NCL forms. We developed and implemented a lysosome-focused, label-free quantitative proteomics approach, followed by functional validations in both CLN5-knockout neuronal-like cell lines and Cln5(-/-) mice, to unravel affected pathways and modifying factors involved in this disease scenario. Our results revealed a key role of CLN5p in lipid homeostasis and sphingolipid metabolism and highlighted mutual NCL biomarkers scored with high lysosomal confidence. A newly generated cln5 knockdown zebrafish model recapitulated most of the pathological features seen in NCL disease. To translate the findings from in-vitro and preclinical models to patients, we evaluated whether two FDA-approved drugs promoting autophagy via TFEB activation or inhibition of the glucosylceramide synthase could modulate in-vitro ROS and lipid overproduction, as well as alter the locomotor phenotype in zebrafish. In summary, our data advance the general understanding of disease mechanisms and modifying factors in CLN5 disease, which are recurring in other NCL forms, also stimulating new pharmacological treatments.

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