Loss of Mitochondrial Tusc2/Fus1 Triggers a Brain Pro-Inflammatory Microenvironment and Early Spatial Memory Impairment

Author:

Farris Tonie12,González-Ochoa Salvador2ORCID,Mohammed Muna12,Rajakaruna Harshana3,Tonello Jane2,Kanagasabai Thanigaivelan12ORCID,Korolkova Olga2,Shimamoto Akiko2,Ivanova Alla12ORCID,Shanker Anil23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, School of Graduate Studies, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN 37208, USA

2. Department of Biochemistry, Cancer Biology, Neuroscience & Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN 37208, USA

3. The Office for Research and Innovation, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN 37208, USA

Abstract

Brain pathological changes impair cognition early in disease etiology. There is an urgent need to understand aging-linked mechanisms of early memory loss to develop therapeutic strategies and prevent the development of cognitive impairment. Tusc2 is a mitochondrial-resident protein regulating Ca2+ fluxes to and from mitochondria impacting overall health. We previously reported that Tusc2−/− female mice develop chronic inflammation and age prematurely, causing age- and sex-dependent spatial memory deficits at 5 months old. Therefore, we investigated Tusc2-dependent mechanisms of memory impairment in 4-month-old mice, comparing changes in resident and brain-infiltrating immune cells. Interestingly, Tusc2−/− female mice demonstrated a pro-inflammatory increase in astrocytes, expression of IFN-γ in CD4+ T cells and Granzyme-B in CD8+T cells. We also found fewer FOXP3+ T-regulatory cells and Ly49G+ NK and Ly49G+ NKT cells in female Tusc2−/− brains, suggesting a dampened anti-inflammatory response. Moreover, Tusc2−/− hippocampi exhibited Tusc2- and sex-specific protein changes associated with brain plasticity, including mTOR activation, and Calbindin and CamKII dysregulation affecting intracellular Ca2+ dynamics. Overall, the data suggest that dysregulation of Ca2+-dependent processes and a heightened pro-inflammatory brain microenvironment in Tusc2−/− mice could underlie cognitive impairment. Thus, strategies to modulate the mitochondrial Tusc2- and Ca2+- signaling pathways in the brain should be explored to improve cognitive health.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

NIH RISE training

NIH AIM-AHEAD

NHGRI Diversity Center for Genome Research

Meharry RCMI Research Capacity Core funding

NICHD of the NIH Award

Publisher

MDPI AG

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