Context-Specific Stress Causes Compartmentalized SARM1 Activation and Local Degeneration in Cortical Neurons

Author:

Hinz Flora I.,Villegas Carmela Louise M.,Roberts Jasmine T.,Yao Heming,Gaddam Shreya,Delwig Anton,Green Samantha A.,Fredrickson Craig,Adrian Max,Asuncion Raymond R.,Cheung Tommy K.,Hayne Margaret,Hackos David H.ORCID,Rose Christopher M.,Richmond David,Hoogenraad Casper C.

Abstract

Sterile alpha and TIR motif containing 1 (SARM1) is an inducible NADase that localizes to mitochondria throughout neurons and senses metabolic changes that occur after injury. Minimal proteomic changes are observed upon either SARM1 depletion or activation, suggesting that SARM1 does not exert broad effects on neuronal protein homeostasis. However, whether SARM1 activation occurs throughout the neuron in response to injury and cell stress remains largely unknown. Using a semiautomated imaging pipeline and a custom-built deep learning scoring algorithm, we studied degeneration in both mixed-sex mouse primary cortical neurons and male human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cortical neurons in response to a number of different stressors. We show that SARM1 activation is differentially restricted to specific neuronal compartments depending on the stressor. Cortical neurons undergo SARM1-dependent axon degeneration after mechanical transection, and SARM1 activation is limited to the axonal compartment distal to the injury site. However, global SARM1 activation following vacor treatment causes both cell body and axon degeneration. Context-specific stressors, such as microtubule dysfunction and mitochondrial stress, induce axonal SARM1 activation leading to SARM1-dependent axon degeneration and SARM1-independent cell body death. Our data reveal that compartment-specific SARM1mediated death signaling is dependent on the type of injury and cellular stressor.

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

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