García-Toledo Irene, Godoy-Corchuelo Juan M, Fernández-Beltrán Luis C, Ali Zeinab, Guindo-Arroyo Ariadna, Jiménez-Coca Irene, Jiménez-Rodríguez Jesús, Javaloyes-García Karen, Viñuela Marcos, Gómez-Pinedo Ulises, Saiz-Aúz Laura, Rábano Alberto, Área-Gómez Estela, Cunningham Thomas J, Corrochano Silvia
Neurological Disorders Group, Hospital Clínico San Carlos, IdISSC, Madrid, Spain.
Department of Medicine, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Acta Neuropathol. 2025 Sep 4;150(1):23. doi: 10.1007/s00401-025-02927-x.
TDP-43 is a nuclear protein encoded by the TARDBP gene, which forms pathological aggregates in various neurodegenerative diseases, collectively known as TDP-43 proteinopathies, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). These diseases are characterized by multiple pathological mechanisms, with disruptions in lipid regulatory pathways emerging as a critical factor. However, the role of TDP-43 in the regulation of the brain lipid homeostasis and the potential connection of TDP-43 dysfunction to myelin alterations in TDP-43 proteionopathies remain poorly understood, despite the fact that lipids, particularly cholesterol, comprise nearly 70% of myelin. To investigate the causal relationship between TDP-43 dysfunction and disruptions in brain cholesterol homeostasis, we conducted multi-omics analyses (lipidomics, transcriptomics, and functional splicing) on the frontal cortex from the Tardbp knock-in mouse model. Lipidomic analysis revealed alterations in lipid pathways related to membrane composition and lipid droplet accumulation, particularly affecting cholesterol-related species. We found higher lipid droplet accumulation in primary fibroblasts derived from these mice, as well as in the brain of the mutant mice. Similarly, the immunohistochemical detection of a lipid droplet marker was higher in the postmortem frontal cortex, gray matter, and white matter of FTLD-TDP patients compared to non-neurological controls. Transcriptomic analyses showed that TDP-43 pathology led to transcriptional dysregulation of genes essential for myelin production and maintenance. We identified impaired cholesterol metabolism, mainly through the downregulation of endogenous cholesterol synthesis, alongside upregulated cholesterol transport pathways, which we further replicated in FTLD-TDP patients transcriptomic datasets. Collectively, our findings suggest that TDP-43 dysfunction disrupts brain cholesterol homeostasis, potentially compromising myelin integrity.
TDP-43是一种由TARDBP基因编码的核蛋白,在各种神经退行性疾病中形成病理性聚集体,这些疾病统称为TDP-43蛋白病,包括肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)和额颞叶痴呆(FTD)。这些疾病具有多种病理机制,脂质调节途径的破坏是一个关键因素。然而,尽管脂质,尤其是胆固醇,占髓磷脂的近70%,但TDP-43在脑脂质稳态调节中的作用以及TDP-43功能障碍与TDP-43蛋白病中髓鞘改变的潜在联系仍知之甚少。为了研究TDP-43功能障碍与脑胆固醇稳态破坏之间的因果关系,我们对Tardbp基因敲入小鼠模型的额叶皮质进行了多组学分析(脂质组学、转录组学和功能剪接)。脂质组学分析揭示了与膜组成和脂滴积累相关的脂质途径的改变,尤其影响与胆固醇相关的物质。我们发现,源自这些小鼠的原代成纤维细胞以及突变小鼠的大脑中脂滴积累更多。同样,与非神经学对照相比,FTLD-TDP患者死后额叶皮质、灰质和白质中脂滴标记物的免疫组化检测结果更高。转录组学分析表明,TDP-43病理导致髓鞘产生和维持所必需基因的转录失调。我们发现胆固醇代谢受损,主要是通过内源性胆固醇合成的下调,同时胆固醇转运途径上调,我们在FTLD-TDP患者转录组数据集进一步验证了这一结果。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,TDP-43功能障碍会破坏脑胆固醇稳态,可能损害髓鞘完整性。