SKA2 regulated hyperactive secretory autophagy drives neuroinflammation-induced neurodegeneration

Author:

Hartmann JakobORCID,Bajaj ThomasORCID,Otten JoyORCID,Klengel Claudia,Gellner Anne-KathrinORCID,Junglas Ellen,Hafner Kathrin,Anderzhanova Elmira A,Tang Fiona,Missig GalenORCID,Rexrode Lindsay,Li KatelynORCID,Pöhlmann Max L,Heinz Daniel EORCID,Lardenoije Roy,Dedic Nina,McCullough Kenneth M,Próchnicki Tomasz,Rhomberg Thomas,Martinelli Silvia,Payton AntonyORCID,Robinson Andrew C.ORCID,Stein ValentinORCID,Latz Eicke,Carlezon William AORCID,Schmidt Mathias V,Murgatroyd ChrisORCID,Berretta SabinaORCID,Klengel TorstenORCID,Pantazopoulos Harry,Ressler Kerry JORCID,Gassen Nils CORCID

Abstract

SummaryHigh levels of proinflammatory cytokines induce neurotoxicity and catalyze inflammation-driven neurodegeneration, but the specific release mechanisms from microglia remain elusive. We demonstrate that secretory autophagy (SA), a non-lytic modality of autophagy for secretion of vesicular cargo, regulates neuroinflammation-mediated neurodegeneration via SKA2 and FKBP5 signaling. SKA2 inhibits SA-dependent IL-1β release by counteracting FKBP5 function. HippocampalSka2knockdown in mice hyperactivates SA resulting in neuroinflammation, subsequent neurodegeneration and complete hippocampal atrophy within six weeks. The hyperactivation of SA increases IL-1β release, initiating an inflammatory feed-forward vicious cycle including NLRP3-inflammasome activation and Gasdermin D (GSDMD)-mediated neurotoxicity, which ultimately drives neurodegeneration. Results from protein expression and co-immunoprecipitation analyses of postmortem brains demonstrate that SA is hyperactivated in Alzheimer’s disease. Overall, our findings suggest that SKA2-regulated, hyperactive SA facilitates neuroinflammation and is linked to Alzheimer’s disease, providing new mechanistic insight into the biology of neuroinflammation.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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