Treatment with sodium butyrate induces autophagy resulting in therapeutic benefits for spinocerebellar ataxia type 3

Author:

Watchon Maxinne1ORCID,Robinson Katherine J.1ORCID,Luu Luan1ORCID,An Yousun1ORCID,Yuan Kristy C.1ORCID,Plenderleith Stuart K.1ORCID,Cheng Flora1ORCID,Don Emily K.1ORCID,Nicholson Garth A.12ORCID,Lee Albert1ORCID,Laird Angela S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Motor Neuron Disease Research Centre, Macquarie Medical School, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. ANZAC Research Institute Concord Repatriation Hospital Concord New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractSpinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3, also known as Machado Joseph disease) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of the trinucleotide repeat region within the ATXN3/MJD gene. Mutation of ATXN3 causes formation of ataxin‐3 protein aggregates, neurodegeneration, and motor deficits. Here we investigated the therapeutic potential and mechanistic activity of sodium butyrate (SB), the sodium salt of butyric acid, a metabolite naturally produced by gut microbiota, on cultured SH‐SY5Y cells and transgenic zebrafish expressing human ataxin‐3 containing 84 glutamine (Q) residues to model SCA3. SCA3 SH‐SY5Y cells were found to contain high molecular weight ataxin‐3 species and detergent‐insoluble protein aggregates. Treatment with SB increased the activity of the autophagy protein quality control pathway in the SCA3 cells, decreased the presence of ataxin‐3 aggregates and presence of high molecular weight ataxin‐3 in an autophagy‐dependent manner. Treatment with SB was also beneficial in vivo, improving swimming performance, increasing activity of the autophagy pathway, and decreasing the presence of insoluble ataxin‐3 protein species in the transgenic SCA3 zebrafish. Co‐treating the SCA3 zebrafish with SB and chloroquine, an autophagy inhibitor, prevented the beneficial effects of SB on zebrafish swimming, indicating that the improved swimming performance was autophagy‐dependent. To understand the mechanism by which SB induces autophagy we performed proteomic analysis of protein lysates from the SB‐treated and untreated SCA3 SH‐SY5Y cells. We found that SB treatment had increased activity of Protein Kinase A and AMPK signaling, with immunoblot analysis confirming that SB treatment had increased levels of AMPK protein and its substrates. Together our findings indicate that treatment with SB can increase activity of the autophagy pathway process and that this has beneficial effects in vitro and in vivo. While our results suggested that this activity may involve activity of a PKA/AMPK‐dependent process, this requires further confirmation. We propose that treatment with sodium butyrate warrants further investigation as a potential treatment for neurodegenerative diseases underpinned by mechanisms relating to protein aggregation including SCA3.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Macquarie University

Publisher

Wiley

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