Psychomotor impairments and therapeutic implications revealed by a mutation associated with infantile Parkinsonism-Dystonia

Author:

Aguilar Jenny I12,Cheng Mary Hongying3,Font Josep4ORCID,Schwartz Alexandra C5ORCID,Ledwitch Kaitlyn67,Duran Amanda67,Mabry Samuel J2,Belovich Andrea N8,Zhu Yanqi2,Carter Angela M2ORCID,Shi Lei9ORCID,Kurian Manju A10,Fenollar-Ferrer Cristina11,Meiler Jens6712,Ryan Renae Monique4,Mchaourab Hassane S5,Bahar Ivet3ORCID,Matthies Heinrich JG2ORCID,Galli Aurelio213ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, United States

2. Department of Surgery, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, United States

3. Department of Computational and Systems Biology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States

4. School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

5. Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, United States

6. Center for Structural Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, United States

7. Department of Chemistry, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, United States

8. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine, Meridian, United States

9. Computational Chemistry and Molecular Biophysics Section, NIDA, NIH, Baltimore, United States

10. Molecular Neurosciences, Developmental Neurosciences, University College London (UCL), London, United Kingdom

11. Laboratory of Molecular & Cellular Neurobiology, NIMH, NIH, Bethesda, United States

12. Institute for Drug Discovery, Leipzig University Medical School, Leipzig, Germany

13. Center for Inter-systemic Networks and Enteric Medical Advances, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, United States

Abstract

Parkinson disease (PD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative disorder affecting over 6.1 million people worldwide. Although the cause of PD remains unclear, studies of highly penetrant mutations identified in early-onset familial parkinsonism have contributed to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying disease pathology. Dopamine (DA) transporter (DAT) deficiency syndrome (DTDS) is a distinct type of infantile parkinsonism-dystonia that shares key clinical features with PD, including motor deficits (progressive bradykinesia, tremor, hypomimia) and altered DA neurotransmission. Here, we define structural, functional, and behavioral consequences of a Cys substitution at R445 in human DAT (hDAT R445C), identified in a patient with DTDS. We found that this R445 substitution disrupts a phylogenetically conserved intracellular (IC) network of interactions that compromise the hDAT IC gate. This is demonstrated by both Rosetta molecular modeling and fine-grained simulations using hDAT R445C, as well as EPR analysis and X-ray crystallography of the bacterial homolog leucine transporter. Notably, the disruption of this IC network of interactions supported a channel-like intermediate of hDAT and compromised hDAT function. We demonstrate that Drosophila melanogaster expressing hDAT R445C show impaired hDAT activity, which is associated with DA dysfunction in isolated brains and with abnormal behaviors monitored at high-speed time resolution. We show that hDAT R445C Drosophila exhibit motor deficits, lack of motor coordination (i.e. flight coordination) and phenotypic heterogeneity in these behaviors that is typically associated with DTDS and PD. These behaviors are linked with altered dopaminergic signaling stemming from loss of DA neurons and decreased DA availability. We rescued flight coordination with chloroquine, a lysosomal inhibitor that enhanced DAT expression in a heterologous expression system. Together, these studies shed some light on how a DTDS-linked DAT mutation underlies DA dysfunction and, possibly, clinical phenotypes shared by DTDS and PD.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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