Reduced STMN2 and pathogenic TDP-43, two hallmarks of ALS, synergize to accelerate motor decline in mice

Author:

Krus Kelsey L.ORCID,Morales Benitez AnaORCID,Strickland AmyORCID,Milbrandt JeffreyORCID,Bloom A. JosephORCID,DiAntonio AaronORCID

Abstract

AbstractPathological TDP-43 loss from the nucleus and cytoplasmic aggregation occurs in almost all cases of ALS and half of frontotemporal dementia patients.Stathmin2(Stmn2)is a key target of TDP-43 regulation and aberrantly splicedStmn2mRNA is found in patients with ALS, frontotemporal dementia, and Alzheimer’s Disease. STMN2 participates in the axon injury response and its depletionin vivopartially replicates ALS-like symptoms including progressive motor deficits and distal NMJ denervation. The interaction between STMN2 loss and TDP-43 dysfunction has not been studied in mice because TDP-43 regulates human but not murineStmn2splicing. Therefore, we generated trans-heterozygous mice that lack one functional copy ofStmn2and express one mutant TDP-43Q331Kknock-in allele to investigate whether reduced STMN2 function exacerbates TDP-43-dependent pathology. Indeed, we observe synergy between these two alleles, resulting in an early onset, progressive motor deficit. Surprisingly, this behavioral defect is not accompanied by detectable neuropathology in the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves or at neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). However, the trans-heterozygous mice exhibit abnormal mitochondrial morphology in their distal axons and NMJs. As both STMN2 and TDP-43 affect mitochondrial dynamics, and neuronal mitochondrial dysfunction is a cardinal feature of many neurodegenerative diseases, this abnormality likely contributes to the observed motor deficit. These findings demonstrate that partial loss of STMN2 significantly exacerbates TDP-43-associated phenotypes, suggesting that STMN2 restoration could ameliorate TDP-43 related disease before the onset of degeneration.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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