Abstract

Huntington disease (HD) is an inherited, fatal neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the progressive loss of striatal medium spiny neurons. Indications of oxidative stress are apparent in brain tissues from both HD patients and HD mouse models; however, the origin of this oxidant stress remains a mystery. Here, we used a yeast artificial chromosome transgenic mouse model of HD (YAC128) to investigate the potential connections between dysregulation of cytosolic Ca(2+) signaling and mitochondrial oxidative damage in HD cells. We found that YAC128 mouse embryonic fibroblasts exhibit a strikingly higher level of mitochondrial matrix Ca(2+) loading and elevated superoxide generation compared with WT cells, indicating that both mitochondrial Ca(2+) signaling and superoxide generation are dysregulated in HD cells. The excessive mitochondrial oxidant stress is critically dependent on mitochondrial Ca(2+) loading in HD cells, because blocking mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake abolished elevated superoxide generation. Similar results were obtained using neurons from HD model mice and fibroblast cells from HD patients. More importantly, mitochondrial Ca(2+) loading in HD cells caused a 2-fold higher level of mitochondrial genomic DNA (mtDNA) damage due to the excessive oxidant generation. This study provides strong evidence to support a new causal link between dysregulated mitochondrial Ca(2+) signaling, elevated mitochondrial oxidant stress, and mtDNA damage in HD. Our results also indicate that reducing mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake could be a therapeutic strategy for HD.

Highlights

  • Oxidative damage has been implicated in the pathology of Huntington disease (HD)

  • We found that YAC128 mouse embryonic fibroblasts exhibit a strikingly higher level of mitochondrial matrix Ca2؉ loading and elevated superoxide generation compared with WT cells, indicating that both mitochondrial Ca2؉ signaling and superoxide generation are dysregulated in HD cells

  • Disrupted Mitochondrial Ca2ϩ Signaling in HD Cells—In our previous studies, we found that mutant huntingtin protein, HTTexp, binds to and facilitates InsP3R1 activity [22], suggesting that excessive cytoplasmic Ca2ϩ signaling may play an important role in HD pathogenesis [9, 23]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Results: Strikingly higher mitochondrial Ca2ϩ loading and superoxide generation cause significantly higher levels of mitochondrial DNA damage in HD cells. Significance: Our data reveal new links between dysregulated mitochondrial Ca2ϩ signaling and elevated oxidative DNA damage in HD. We found that YAC128 mouse embryonic fibroblasts exhibit a strikingly higher level of mitochondrial matrix Ca2؉ loading and elevated superoxide generation compared with WT cells, indicating that both mitochondrial Ca2؉ signaling and superoxide generation are dysregulated in HD cells. The excessive mitochondrial oxidant stress is critically dependent on mitochondrial Ca2؉ loading in HD cells, because blocking mitochondrial Ca2؉ uptake abolished elevated superoxide generation. Mitochondrial Ca2؉ loading in HD cells caused a 2-fold higher level of mitochondrial genomic DNA (mtDNA) damage due to the excessive oxidant generation. Our results indicate that reducing mitochondrial Ca2؉ uptake could be a therapeutic strategy for HD

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call