Authors
Ashling Giblin, Alexander J Cammack, Niek Blomberg, Alla Mikheenko, Mireia Carcole, Rachel Coneys, Lele Zhou, Yassene Mohammed, Damien Olivier-Jimenez, Magda L Atilano, Teresa Niccoli, Alyssa N Coyne, Rik van der Kant, Tammaryn Lashley, Martin Giera, Linda Partridge, Adrian M Isaacs
Publication date
2024
Journal
bioRxiv
Pages
2024.01. 16.575677
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Description
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.
Total citations
Scholar articles
A Giblin, AJ Cammack, N Blomberg, A Mikheenko… - bioRxiv, 2024