POLG genotype influences degree of mitochondrial dysfunction in iPSC derived neural progenitors, but not the parent iPSC or derived glia

Author:

Hong Yu,Kristiansen Cecilie KatrinORCID,Chen Anbin,Nido Gonzalo S.ORCID,Høyland Lena Elise,Ziegler MathiasORCID,Sullivan Gareth John,Bindoff Laurence A.ORCID,Liang Kristina XiaoORCID

Abstract

AbstractDiseases caused byPOLGmutations are the most common form of mitochondrial disease and associated with phenotypes of varying severity. Clinical studies have shown that patients with compound heterozygousPOLGmutations have a lower survival rate than patients with homozygous mutations, but the molecular mechanisms behind this remain unexplored. Using an induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) model, we investigate differences between homozygous and compound heterozygous genotypes in different cell types, including patient-specific fibroblasts, iPSCs, and iPSC-derived neural stem cells (NSCs) and astrocytes. We found that compound heterozygous lines exhibited greater impairment of mitochondrial function in NSCs than homozygous NSCs, but not in fibroblasts, iPSCs, or astrocytes. Compared with homozygous NSCs, compound heterozygous NSCs exhibited more severe functional defects, including reduced ATP production, loss of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number and complex I expression, disturbance of NAD+metabolism, and higher ROS levels, which further led to cellular senescence and activation of mitophagy. RNA sequencing analysis revealed greater downregulation of mitochondrial and metabolic pathways, including the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation, in compound heterozygous NSCs. Our iPSC-based disease model can be widely used to understand the genotype-phenotype relationship of affected brain cells in mitochondrial diseases, and further drug discovery applications.Graphic Abstract

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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