Slingshot homolog-1 amplifies mitochondrial abnormalities by distinctly impairing health and clearance of mitochondria

Author:

Cazzaro Sara123,Zhao Xingyu3,Zhao Victoria K12,Kim Yenna K12,Woo Jung-A A12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology , School of Medicine, , Cleveland, OH 44106, USA

2. Case Western Reserve University , School of Medicine, , Cleveland, OH 44106, USA

3. Department of Molecular Medicine, Byrd Alzheimer’s Center & Research Institute, USF Health Morsani College of Medicine , Tampa, FL 33613, USA

Abstract

Abstract Accumulating toxic protein assemblies, including Aβ and tau, and dysfunctional mitochondria are associated with synaptic and neuronal loss in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Such accumulations are thought to be owing to clearance defects in the autophagy-lysosome pathway. Mitochondrial dysfunction is evident in AD brains and animal models at multiple levels, such as mitochondrial genomic mutations, disrupted bioenergetics, deregulated mitochondrial dynamics and impaired clearance of damaged mitochondria (mitophagy). Slingshot homolog-1 (SSH1) is a phosphatase activated by oxidative stress, high intracellular levels of Ca2+ and Aβ42 oligomers (Aβ42O), known for its function to dephosphorylate/activate cofilin through the N-terminal region. SSH1-mediated cofilin dephosphorylation results in Ab42O-induced severing of F-actin and translocation of cofilin to mitochondria, which promotes mitochondria-mediated apoptosis, synaptic loss and synaptic deficits. On the other hand, SSH1-mediated dephosphorylation/deactivation of the autophagy-cargo receptor p62 (SQSTM1), through its C-terminal region, inhibits p62 autophagy flux. However, the interplay between these two different activities of SSH1 in Aβ42O-induced mitochondrial toxicity remains unclear. In this study, we assessed the role of endogenous SSH1 and different regions of SSH1 in regulating mitochondrial health, mitochondrial respiration, clearance of damaged mitochondria and synaptic integrity in vitro and in vivo. Our results indicate that SSH1 suppresses mitochondrial health and respiration through the cofilin-binding N-terminal region, whereas SSH1 impairs mitophagy through a newly identified ~ 100 residue p62-binding domain in the C-terminal region. These results indicate that both N-terminal and C-terminal regions negatively impact mitochondria by distinct and independent modalities to amplify mitochondrial abnormalities, making SSH1 an excellent target to mitigate AD pathogenesis.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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