Correlative light and electron microscopy suggests that mutant huntingtin dysregulates the endolysosomal pathway in presymptomatic Huntington’s disease

被引:0
|
作者
Ya Zhou
Thomas R. Peskett
Christian Landles
John B. Warner
Kirupa Sathasivam
Edward J. Smith
Shu Chen
Ronald Wetzel
Hilal A. Lashuel
Gillian P. Bates
Helen R. Saibil
机构
[1] University College London,Huntington’s Disease Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and UK Dementia Research Institute at UCL, Queen Square Institute of Neurology
[2] Birkbeck College,Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology
[3] ETH Zurich,Department of Biology, Institute of Biochemistry
[4] École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL),Laboratory of Molecular and Chemical Biology of Neurodegeneration, Brain Mind Institute
[5] University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,Department of Structural Biology
来源
Acta Neuropathologica Communications | / 9卷
关键词
Huntington’s disease; Correlative light and electron microscopy; Electron tomography; Huntingtin aggregation; Polyglutamine; Endolysosomal system; Multivesicular body; Amphisome; Autolysosome; Exocytosis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a late onset, inherited neurodegenerative disorder for which early pathogenic events remain poorly understood. Here we show that mutant exon 1 HTT proteins are recruited to a subset of cytoplasmic aggregates in the cell bodies of neurons in brain sections from presymptomatic HD, but not wild-type, mice. This occurred in a disease stage and polyglutamine-length dependent manner. We successfully adapted a high-resolution correlative light and electron microscopy methodology, originally developed for mammalian and yeast cells, to allow us to correlate light microscopy and electron microscopy images on the same brain section within an accuracy of 100 nm. Using this approach, we identified these recruitment sites as single membrane bound, vesicle-rich endolysosomal organelles, specifically as (1) multivesicular bodies (MVBs), or amphisomes and (2) autolysosomes or residual bodies. The organelles were often found in close-proximity to phagophore-like structures. Immunogold labeling localized mutant HTT to non-fibrillar, electron lucent structures within the lumen of these organelles. In presymptomatic HD, the recruitment organelles were predominantly MVBs/amphisomes, whereas in late-stage HD, there were more autolysosomes or residual bodies. Electron tomograms indicated the fusion of small vesicles with the vacuole within the lumen, suggesting that MVBs develop into residual bodies. We found that markers of MVB-related exocytosis were depleted in presymptomatic mice and throughout the disease course. This suggests that endolysosomal homeostasis has moved away from exocytosis toward lysosome fusion and degradation, in response to the need to clear the chronically aggregating mutant HTT protein, and that this occurs at an early stage in HD pathogenesis.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Correlative light and electron microscopy suggests that mutant huntingtin dysregulates the endolysosomal pathway in presymptomatic Huntington's disease
    Zhou, Ya
    Peskett, Thomas R.
    Landles, Christian
    Warner, John B.
    Sathasivam, Kirupa
    Smith, Edward J.
    Chen, Shu
    Wetzel, Ronald
    Lashuel, Hilal A.
    Bates, Gillian P.
    Saibil, Helen R.
    ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS, 2021, 9 (01)
  • [2] Parallel evaluation of mutant huntingtin and neurofilament light in Huntington's disease
    Byrne, L.
    Rodrigues, F.
    Johnson, E.
    De Vita, E.
    Czech, C.
    Schobel, S.
    Scahill, R.
    Heslegrave, A.
    Zetterberg, H.
    Wild, W.
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2018, 33 : S370 - S374
  • [3] Structural insight into transmissive mutant huntingtin species by correlative light and electron microscopy and cryo-electron tomography
    Kuang, Xuyuan
    Nunn, Kyle
    Jiang, Jennifer
    Castellano, Paul
    Hardikar, Uttara
    Horgan, Arianna
    Kong, Joyce
    Tan, Zhiqun
    Dai, Wei
    BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2021, 560 : 99 - 104
  • [4] QUANTIFYING MUTANT HUNTINGTIN IN HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE CSF
    Wild, Edward
    Robertson, Nicola
    Miller, James
    Traeger, Ulrike
    Haider, Salman
    Macdonald, Douglas
    Langbehn, Douglas
    Kuhn, Rainer
    Weiss, Andreas
    Tabrizi, Sarah
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2014, 85 (10):
  • [5] Huntington's disease: degradation of mutant huntingtin by autophagy
    Sarkar, Sovan
    Rubinsztein, David C.
    FEBS JOURNAL, 2008, 275 (17) : 4263 - 4270
  • [6] Mutant huntingtin and neurofilament light have distinct longitudinal dynamics in Huntington's disease
    Rodrigues, Filipe B.
    Byrne, Lauren M.
    Tortelli, Rosanna
    Johnson, Eileanoir B.
    Wijeratne, Peter A.
    Arridge, Marzena
    De Vita, Enrico
    Ghazaleh, Naghmeh
    Houghton, Richard
    Furby, Hannah
    Alexander, Daniel C.
    Tabrizi, Sarah J.
    Schobel, Scott
    Scahill, Rachael, I
    Heslegrave, Amanda
    Zetterberg, Henrik
    Wild, Edward J.
    SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2020, 12 (574)
  • [7] Caspase cleavage of mutant huntingtin precedes neurodegeneration in Huntington's disease
    Wellington, CL
    Ellerby, LM
    Gutekunst, CA
    Rogers, D
    Warby, S
    Graham, RK
    Loubser, O
    van Raamsdonk, J
    Singaraja, R
    Yang, YZ
    Gafni, J
    Bredesen, D
    Hersch, SM
    Leavitt, BR
    Roy, S
    Nicholson, DW
    Hayden, MR
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2002, 22 (18): : 7862 - 7872
  • [8] Huntington’s disease cerebrospinal fluid seeds aggregation of mutant huntingtin
    Z Tan
    W Dai
    T G M van Erp
    J Overman
    A Demuro
    M A Digman
    A Hatami
    R Albay
    E M Sontag
    K T Potkin
    S Ling
    F Macciardi
    W E Bunney
    J D Long
    J S Paulsen
    J M Ringman
    I Parker
    C Glabe
    L M Thompson
    W Chiu
    S G Potkin
    Molecular Psychiatry, 2015, 20 : 1286 - 1293
  • [9] Huntington's disease cerebrospinal fluid seeds aggregation of mutant huntingtin
    Tan, Z.
    Dai, W.
    van Erp, T. G. M.
    Overman, J.
    Demuro, A.
    Digman, M. A.
    Hatami, A.
    Albay, R.
    Sontag, E. M.
    Potkin, K. T.
    Ling, S.
    Macciardi, F.
    Bunney, W. E.
    Long, J. D.
    Paulsen, J. S.
    Ringman, J. M.
    Parker, I.
    Glabe, C.
    Thompson, L. M.
    Chiu, W.
    Potkin, S. G.
    MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, 2015, 20 (11) : 1286 - 1293
  • [10] Development of a ligand for in vivo imaging of mutant huntingtin in Huntington's disease
    Bertoglio, Daniele
    Bard, Jonathan
    Hessmann, Manuela
    Liu, Longbin
    Gaertner, Annette
    De Lombaerde, Stef
    Huscher, Britta
    Zajicek, Franziska
    Miranda, Alan
    Peters, Finn
    Herrmann, Frank
    Schaertl, Sabine
    Vasilkovska, Tamara
    Brown, Christopher J.
    Johnson, Peter D.
    Prime, Michael E.
    Mills, Matthew R.
    Van der Linden, Annemie
    Mrzljak, Ladislav
    Khetarpal, Vinod
    Wang, Yuchuan
    Marchionini, Deanna M.
    Skinbjerg, Mette
    Verhaeghe, Jeroen
    Dominguez, Celia
    Staelens, Steven
    Munoz-Sanjuan, Ignacio
    SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2022, 14 (630)