Neuronal ablation of mt-AspRS in mice induces immune pathway activation prior to severe and progressive cortical and behavioral disruption

Christina L. Nemeth, Sophia N. Tomlinson, Melissa Rosen, Brett M. O'Brien, Oscar Larraza, Mahim Jain, Connor F. Murray, Joel S. Marx, Michael Delannoy, Amena S. Fine, Dan Wu, Aleksandra Trifunovic, Ali Fatemi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation (LBSL) is a rare, slowly progressive white matter disease caused by mutations in the mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (mt-AspRS, or DARS2). While patients show characteristic MRI T2 signal abnormalities throughout the cerebral white matter, brainstem, and spinal cord, the phenotypic spectrum is broad and a multitude of gene variants have been associated with the disease. Here, Dars2 disruption in CamKIIα-expressing cortical and hippocampal neurons results in slowly progressive increases in behavioral activity at five months, and culminating by nine months as severe brain atrophy, behavioral dysfunction, reduced corpus callosum thickness, and microglial morphology indicative of neuroinflammation. Interestingly, RNAseq based gene expression studies performed prior to the presentation of this severe phenotype reveal the upregulation of several pathways involved in immune activation, cytokine production and signaling, and defense response regulation. RNA transcript analysis demonstrates that activation of immune and cell stress pathways are initiated in advance of a behavioral phenotype and cerebral deficits. An understanding of these pathways and their contribution to significant neuronal loss in CamKII-Dars2 deficient mice may aid in deciphering mechanisms of LBSL pathology.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number113164
JournalExperimental Neurology
Volume326
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2020

Keywords

  • DARS2
  • LBSL
  • Leukodystrophy
  • Leukoencephalopathy
  • Mitochondria
  • tRNA synthetase

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neurology
  • Developmental Neuroscience

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