Neuronal polyunsaturated fatty acids are protective in FTD/ALS

Ashling Giblin(UK Dementia Research Institute), AJ Cammack(UK Dementia Research Institute), N. Blomberg(Leiden University Medical Center), Alla Mikheenko(UK Dementia Research Institute), Mireia Carcolé(UK Dementia Research Institute), Rachel Coneys(UK Dementia Research Institute), Lin Zhou(UK Dementia Research Institute), Yassene Mohammed(Leiden University Medical Center), Damien Olivier‐Jimenez(Leiden University Medical Center), Magda L. Atilano(MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing), Teresa Niccoli(MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing), AN Coyne(Johns Hopkins University), Rik van der Kant(Amsterdam University Medical Centers), Tammaryn Lashley(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Martin Giera(Leiden University Medical Center), Linda Partridge(MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing), AM Isaacs(UK Dementia Research Institute)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
January 17, 2024
Cited by 6Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract We report a conserved transcriptomic signature of reduced fatty acid and lipid metabolism gene expression in human post-mortem ALS spinal cord and a Drosophila model of the most common genetic cause of FTD/ALS, a repeat expansion in C9orf72 . To investigate lipid alterations, we performed lipidomics on C9FTD/ALS iPSC-neurons and post-mortem FTLD brain tissue. This revealed a common and specific reduction in phospholipid species containing polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). To determine whether this PUFA deficit contributes to neurodegeneration, we fed C9FTD/ALS flies PUFAs, which yielded a modest increase in survival. However, increasing PUFA levels specifically in neurons of the C9orf72 flies, by overexpressing fatty acid desaturase enzymes, led to a substantial extension of lifespan. Neuronal overexpression of fatty acid desaturases also suppressed stressor induced neuronal death in C9FTD/ALS patient iPSC-neurons. These data implicate neuronal fatty acid saturation in the pathogenesis of FTD/ALS and suggest that interventions to increase PUFA levels specifically within neurons will be beneficial.


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