4.6 Article

Optogenetic delivery of trophic signals in a genetic model of Parkinson's disease

期刊

PLOS GENETICS
卷 17, 期 4, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009479

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资金

  1. European Union under REA [303564, 334077]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [WI2111/8, 2848, SO1379/4-1, SO1379/2-1/2-2]
  3. German Academic Exchange Service in The Australia-Germany Joint Research Cooperation Scheme (DAAD) [57446392]
  4. Universities Australia in The Australia-Germany Joint Research Cooperation Scheme
  5. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [APP1187638]
  6. Ramon Areces post-doctoral fellowship

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This study presents a novel light-based method to deliver cell type-specific pro-survival signals in a genetic model of Parkinson's disease, demonstrating significant therapeutic effects. The optogenetic delivery of trophic signals is cell type-specific and reversible, offering potential for the development of novel spatio-temporal regulation of tissue repair strategies.
Author summary The death of physiologically important cells and tissues underlies of a wide range of diseases, including the neurodegenerative disorder Parkinson's disease. Currently, the two major strategies to counter cell degeneration are the injection of soluble growth factor peptides and growth factor gene therapy. Importantly, both strategies can lead to the undesired activation of healthy bystander cells or the non-natural permanent modification of cells and their internal signals. Here, we developed a light-based method to overcome these limitations. The use of optogenetics allowed delivering cell type-specific pro-survival signals in a genetic model of Parkinson's disease. In Drosophila and human cells that exhibit loss of the PINK1 gene, akin to autosomal recessive Parkinson's disease, we efficiently suppressed disease phenotypes using a light-activated tyrosine kinase receptor. This work demonstrates a 'remote controlled' and thus spatio-temporally precise strategy to interfere with degeneration and may open new avenues towards tissue repair in a variety of disease models, including but not limited to diseases of the brain. Optogenetics has been harnessed to shed new mechanistic light on current and future therapeutic strategies. This has been to date achieved by the regulation of ion flow and electrical signals in neuronal cells and neural circuits that are known to be affected by disease. In contrast, the optogenetic delivery of trophic biochemical signals, which support cell survival and are implicated in degenerative disorders, has never been demonstrated in an animal model of disease. Here, we reengineered the human and Drosophila melanogaster REarranged during Transfection (hRET and dRET) receptors to be activated by light, creating one-component optogenetic tools termed Opto-hRET and Opto-dRET. Upon blue light stimulation, these receptors robustly induced the MAPK/ERK proliferative signaling pathway in cultured cells. In PINK1(B9) flies that exhibit loss of PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1), a kinase associated with familial Parkinson's disease (PD), light activation of Opto-dRET suppressed mitochondrial defects, tissue degeneration and behavioral deficits. In human cells with PINK1 loss-of-function, mitochondrial fragmentation was rescued using Opto-dRET via the PI3K/NF-kB pathway. Our results demonstrate that a light-activated receptor can ameliorate disease hallmarks in a genetic model of PD. The optogenetic delivery of trophic signals is cell type-specific and reversible and thus has the potential to inspire novel strategies towards a spatio-temporal regulation of tissue repair.

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