Baxter Sally L, Allard Denise E, Crowl Christopher, Sherwood Nina Tang
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
Dis Model Mech. 2014 Aug;7(8):1005-12. doi: 10.1242/dmm.013987. Epub 2014 Jun 6.
Autosomal-dominant hereditary spastic paraplegia (AD-HSP) is a crippling neurodegenerative disease for which effective treatment or cure remains unknown. Victims experience progressive mobility loss due to degeneration of the longest axons in the spinal cord. Over half of AD-HSP cases arise from loss-of-function mutations in spastin, which encodes a microtubule-severing AAA ATPase. In Drosophila models of AD-HSP, larvae lacking Spastin exhibit abnormal motor neuron morphology and function, and most die as pupae. Adult survivors display impaired mobility, reminiscent of the human disease. Here, we show that rearing pupae or adults at reduced temperature (18°C), compared with the standard temperature of 24°C, improves the survival and mobility of adult spastin mutants but leaves wild-type flies unaffected. Flies expressing human spastin with pathogenic mutations are similarly rescued. Additionally, larval cooling partially rescues the larval synaptic phenotype. Cooling thus alleviates known spastin phenotypes for each developmental stage at which it is administered and, notably, is effective even in mature adults. We find further that cold treatment rescues larval synaptic defects in flies with mutations in Flower (a protein with no known relation to Spastin) and mobility defects in flies lacking Kat60-L1, another microtubule-severing protein enriched in the CNS. Together, these data support the hypothesis that the beneficial effects of cold extend beyond specific alleviation of Spastin dysfunction, to at least a subset of cellular and behavioral neuronal defects. Mild hypothermia, a common neuroprotective technique in clinical treatment of acute anoxia, might thus hold additional promise as a therapeutic approach for AD-HSP and, potentially, for other neurodegenerative diseases.
常染色体显性遗传性痉挛性截瘫(AD - HSP)是一种致残性神经退行性疾病,目前尚无有效的治疗方法或治愈手段。由于脊髓中最长轴突的退化,患者会逐渐丧失行动能力。超过半数的AD - HSP病例是由痉挛蛋白(spastin)的功能丧失突变引起的,该蛋白编码一种切断微管的AAA型ATP酶。在AD - HSP的果蝇模型中,缺乏痉挛蛋白的幼虫表现出异常的运动神经元形态和功能,大多数在蛹期死亡。成年幸存者表现出行动能力受损,这与人类疾病相似。在这里,我们表明与标准温度24°C相比,在较低温度(18°C)下饲养蛹或成虫,可提高成年痉挛蛋白突变体的存活率和行动能力,但对野生型果蝇没有影响。表达带有致病突变的人类痉挛蛋白的果蝇也同样得到了拯救。此外,幼虫期降温部分挽救了幼虫期的突触表型。因此,降温可缓解在各个发育阶段已知与痉挛蛋白相关的表型,值得注意的是,即使在成熟成虫中也有效。我们进一步发现,冷处理挽救了Flower(一种与痉挛蛋白无已知关联的蛋白质)发生突变的果蝇的幼虫突触缺陷,以及缺乏Kat60 - L1(另一种在中枢神经系统中富集的切断微管蛋白)的果蝇的行动能力缺陷。总之,这些数据支持了这样一种假设,即寒冷的有益作用不仅限于特定缓解痉挛蛋白功能障碍,还至少延伸至细胞和行为神经元缺陷中的一部分。轻度低温是急性缺氧临床治疗中一种常见的神经保护技术;因此,它可能作为AD - HSP以及潜在其他神经退行性疾病的治疗方法带来更多希望