Mitochondrial spongiotic brain disease: astrocytic stress and harmful rapamycin and ketosis effect

Author:

Ignatenko Olesia1ORCID,Nikkanen Joni2ORCID,Kononov Alexander3ORCID,Zamboni Nicola4,Ince-Dunn Gulayse1ORCID,Suomalainen Anu156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Stem Cells and Metabolism Research Program, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

2. Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA

3. Cancer Research UK, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

4. Department of Biology, Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

5. Neuroscience Center, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

6. HUSlab, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

Abstract

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion syndrome (MDS) is a group of severe, tissue-specific diseases of childhood with unknown pathogenesis. Brain-specific MDS manifests as devastating spongiotic encephalopathy with no curative therapy. Here, we report cell type–specific stress responses and effects of rapamycin treatment and ketogenic diet (KD) in mice with spongiotic encephalopathy mimicking human MDS, as these interventions were reported to improve some mitochondrial disease signs or symptoms. These mice with astrocyte-specific knockout of Twnk gene encoding replicative mtDNA helicase Twinkle (TwKOastro) show wide-spread cell-autonomous astrocyte activation and mitochondrial integrated stress response (ISRmt) induction with major metabolic remodeling of the brain. Mice with neuronal-specific TwKO show no ISRmt. Both KD and rapamycin lead to rapid deterioration and weight loss of TwKOastro and premature trial termination. Although rapamycin had no robust effects on TwKOastro brain pathology, KD exacerbated spongiosis, gliosis, and ISRmt. Our evidence emphasizes that mitochondrial disease treatments and stress responses are tissue- and disease specific. Furthermore, rapamycin and KD are deleterious in MDS-linked spongiotic encephalopathy, pointing to a crucial role of diet and metabolism for mitochondrial disease progression.

Funder

University of Helsinki Doctoral Program In Biomedicine

Biomedicum Foundation

European Molecular Biology Organization

Human Frontier Science Program Organization

Academy of Finland

Sigrid Juselius Foundation

Publisher

Life Science Alliance, LLC

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Plant Science,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Ecology

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