Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 16 de 16
Filter
1.
Hum Mol Genet ; 30(7): 536-551, 2021 05 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33640978

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders are empirically managed with variable antioxidant, cofactor and vitamin 'cocktails'. However, clinical trial validated and approved compounds, or doses, do not exist for any single or combinatorial mitochondrial disease therapy. Here, we sought to pre-clinically evaluate whether rationally designed mitochondrial medicine combinatorial regimens might synergistically improve survival, health and physiology in translational animal models of respiratory chain complex I disease. Having previously demonstrated that gas-1(fc21) complex I subunit ndufs2-/-C. elegans have short lifespan that can be significantly rescued with 17 different metabolic modifiers, signaling modifiers or antioxidants, here we evaluated 11 random combinations of these three treatment classes on gas-1(fc21) lifespan. Synergistic rescue occurred only with glucose, nicotinic acid and N-acetylcysteine (Glu + NA + NAC), yielding improved mitochondrial membrane potential that reflects integrated respiratory chain function, without exacerbating oxidative stress, and while reducing mitochondrial stress (UPRmt) and improving intermediary metabolic disruptions at the levels of the transcriptome, steady-state metabolites and intermediary metabolic flux. Equimolar Glu + NA + NAC dosing in a zebrafish vertebrate model of rotenone-based complex I inhibition synergistically rescued larval activity, brain death, lactate, ATP and glutathione levels. Overall, these data provide objective preclinical evidence in two evolutionary-divergent animal models of mitochondrial complex I disease to demonstrate that combinatorial Glu + NA + NAC therapy significantly improved animal resiliency, even in the face of stressors that cause severe metabolic deficiency, thereby preventing acute neurologic and biochemical decompensation. Clinical trials are warranted to evaluate the efficacy of this lead combinatorial therapy regimen to improve resiliency and health outcomes in human subjects with mitochondrial disease.


Subject(s)
Acetylcysteine/pharmacology , Disease Models, Animal , Electron Transport Complex I/metabolism , Glucose/pharmacology , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondrial Diseases/prevention & control , Niacin/pharmacology , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans , Drug Synergism , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Free Radical Scavengers/pharmacology , Humans , Longevity/drug effects , Longevity/genetics , Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial/drug effects , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Mitochondrial Diseases/metabolism , Mutation , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Zebrafish
2.
Hum Mol Genet ; 28(11): 1837-1852, 2019 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30668749

ABSTRACT

Cysteamine bitartrate is a US Food and Drug Administration-approved therapy for nephropathic cystinosis also postulated to enhance glutathione biosynthesis. We hypothesized this antioxidant effect may reduce oxidative stress in primary mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) disease, improving cellular viability and organismal health. Here, we systematically evaluated the therapeutic potential of cysteamine bitartrate in RC disease models spanning three evolutionarily distinct species. These pre-clinical studies demonstrated the narrow therapeutic window of cysteamine bitartrate, with toxicity at millimolar levels directly correlating with marked induction of hydrogen peroxide production. Micromolar range cysteamine bitartrate treatment in Caenorhabditis elegans gas-1(fc21) RC complex I (NDUFS2-/-) disease invertebrate worms significantly improved mitochondrial membrane potential and oxidative stress, with corresponding modest improvement in fecundity but not lifespan. At 10 to 100 µm concentrations, cysteamine bitartrate improved multiple RC complex disease FBXL4 human fibroblast survival, and protected both complex I (rotenone) and complex IV (azide) Danio rerio vertebrate zebrafish disease models from brain death. Mechanistic profiling of cysteamine bitartrate effects showed it increases aspartate levels and flux, without increasing total glutathione levels. Transcriptional normalization of broadly dysregulated intermediary metabolic, glutathione, cell defense, DNA, and immune pathways was greater in RC disease human cells than in C. elegans, with similar rescue in both models of downregulated ribosomal and proteasomal pathway expression. Overall, these data suggest cysteamine bitartrate may hold therapeutic potential in RC disease, although not through obvious modulation of total glutathione levels. Careful consideration is required to determine safe and effective cysteamine bitartrate concentrations to further evaluate in clinical trials of human subjects with primary mitochondrial RC disease.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/pharmacology , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Cysteamine/pharmacology , Mitochondrial Diseases/drug therapy , NADH Dehydrogenase/genetics , Animals , Brain Death/metabolism , Brain Death/pathology , Caenorhabditis elegans/drug effects , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electron Transport/drug effects , F-Box Proteins/genetics , Fertility/drug effects , Fibroblasts/drug effects , Glutathione/genetics , Glutathione/metabolism , Humans , Hydrogen Peroxide , Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial/drug effects , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Mitochondrial Diseases/pathology , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics , Zebrafish/genetics
3.
Mol Genet Metab ; 123(4): 449-462, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29526616

ABSTRACT

Oxidative stress is a known contributing factor in mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) disease pathogenesis. Yet, no efficient means exists to objectively evaluate the comparative therapeutic efficacy or toxicity of different antioxidant compounds empirically used in human RC disease. We postulated that pre-clinical comparative analysis of diverse antioxidant drugs having suggested utility in primary RC disease using animal and cellular models of RC dysfunction may improve understanding of their integrated effects and physiologic mechanisms, and enable prioritization of lead antioxidant molecules to pursue in human clinical trials. Here, lifespan effects of N-acetylcysteine (NAC), vitamin E, vitamin C, coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), mitochondrial-targeted CoQ10 (MS010), lipoate, and orotate were evaluated as the primary outcome in a well-established, short-lived C. elegans gas-1(fc21) animal model of RC complex I disease. Healthspan effects were interrogated to assess potential reversal of their globally disrupted in vivo mitochondrial physiology, transcriptome profiles, and intermediary metabolic flux. NAC or vitamin E fully rescued, and coenzyme Q, lipoic acid, orotic acid, and vitamin C partially rescued gas-1(fc21) lifespan toward that of wild-type N2 Bristol worms. MS010 and CoQ10 largely reversed biochemical pathway expression changes in gas-1(fc21) worms. While nearly all drugs normalized the upregulated expression of the "cellular antioxidant pathway", they failed to rescue the mutant worms' increased in vivo mitochondrial oxidant burden. NAC and vitamin E therapeutic efficacy were validated in human fibroblast and/or zebrafish complex I disease models. Remarkably, rotenone-induced zebrafish brain death was preventable partially with NAC and fully with vitamin E. Overall, these pre-clinical model animal data demonstrate that several classical antioxidant drugs do yield significant benefit on viability and survival in primary mitochondrial disease, where their major therapeutic benefit appears to result from targeting global cellular, rather than intramitochondria-specific, oxidative stress. Clinical trials are needed to evaluate whether the two antioxidants, NAC and vitamin E, that show greatest efficacy in translational model animals significantly improve the survival, function, and feeling of human subjects with primary mitochondrial RC disease.


Subject(s)
Acetylcysteine/pharmacology , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Electron Transport Complex I/metabolism , Longevity , Mitochondrial Diseases/drug therapy , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Vitamin E/pharmacology , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Caenorhabditis elegans , Cells, Cultured , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Fibroblasts/drug effects , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fibroblasts/pathology , Free Radical Scavengers/pharmacology , Humans , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondria/pathology , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Mitochondrial Diseases/metabolism , Mitochondrial Diseases/pathology , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Mutation
4.
Aging Dis ; 9(1): 17-30, 2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29392078

ABSTRACT

TCF7L2 is located at one of the most strongly associated type 2 diabetes loci reported to date. We previously reported that the most abundant member of a specific protein complex to bind across the presumed causal variant at this locus, rs7903146, was poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase type 1 (PARP-1). We analyzed the impact of PARP-1 inhibition on C. elegans health in the setting of hyperglycemia and on glucose-stimulated GLP-1 secretion in human intestinal cells. Given that high glucose concentrations progressively shorten the lifespan of C. elegans, in part by impacting key well-conserved insulin-modulated signaling pathways, we investigated the effect of PARP-1 inhibition with Olaparib on the lifespan of C. elegans nematodes under varying hyperglycemic conditions. Subsequently, we investigated whether Olaparib treatment had any effect on glucose-stimulated GLP-1 secretion in the human NCI-H716 intestinal cell line, a model system for the investigation of enteroendocrine function. Treatment with 100uM Olaparib in nematodes exposed to high concentrations of glucose led to significant lifespan rescue. The beneficial lifespan effect of Olaparib appeared to require both PARP-1 and TCF7L2, since treatment had no effect in hyperglycemic conditions in knock-out worm strains for either of these homologs. Further investigation using the NCI-H716 cells revealed that Olaparib significantly enhanced secretion of the incretin, GLP-1, plus the gene expression of TCF7L2, GCG and PC1. These data from studies in both C. elegans and a human cell line suggest that PARP-1 inhibition offers a novel therapeutic avenue to treat type 2 diabetes.

5.
Mitochondrion ; 38: 6-16, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28750948

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) diseases and congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) share extensive clinical overlap but are considered to have distinct cellular pathophysiology. Here, we demonstrate that an essential physiologic connection exists between cellular N-linked deglycosylation capacity and mitochondrial function. Following identification of altered muscle and liver mitochondrial amount and function in two children with a CDG subtype caused by NGLY1 deficiency, we evaluated mitochondrial physiology in NGLY1 disease human fibroblasts, and in NGLY1-knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts and C. elegans. Across these distinct evolutionary models of cytosolic NGLY1 deficiency, a consistent disruption of mitochondrial physiology was present involving modestly reduced mitochondrial content with more pronounced impairment of mitochondrial membrane potential, increased mitochondrial matrix oxidant burden, and reduced cellular respiratory capacity. Lentiviral rescue restored NGLY1 expression and mitochondrial physiology in human and mouse fibroblasts, confirming that NGLY1 directly influences mitochondrial function. Overall, cellular deglycosylation capacity is shown to be a significant factor in mitochondrial RC disease pathogenesis across divergent evolutionary species.


Subject(s)
Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation/pathology , Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation/physiopathology , Fibroblasts/pathology , Fibroblasts/physiology , Mitochondria/pathology , Mitochondria/physiology , Peptide-N4-(N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminyl) Asparagine Amidase/deficiency , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans , Cell Respiration , Cells, Cultured , Child, Preschool , Electron Transport , Female , Gene Knockout Techniques , Genetic Complementation Test , Humans , Male , Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial , Mice, Knockout
6.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 41(2): 157-168, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29159707

ABSTRACT

Propionic acidemia (PA) is a classical inborn error of metabolism with high morbidity that results from the inability of the propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) enzyme to convert propionyl-CoA to methylmalonyl-CoA. PA is inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion due to functional loss of both alleles of either PCCA or PCCB. These genes are highly conserved across evolutionarily diverse species and share extensive similarity with pcca-1 and pccb-1 in the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans. Here, we report the global metabolic effects of deletion in a single PCC gene, either pcca-1 or pccb-1, in C. elegans. Animal lifespan was significantly reduced relative to wild-type worms in both mutant strains, although to a greater degree in pcca-1. Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) capacity and efficiency as determined by direct polarography of isolated mitochondria were also significantly reduced in both mutant strains. While in vivo quantitation of mitochondrial physiology was normal in pccb-1 mutants, pcca-1 deletion mutants had significantly increased mitochondrial matrix oxidant burden as well as significantly decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial content. Whole worm steady-state free amino acid profiling by UPLC revealed reduced levels in both mutant strains of the glutathione precursor cysteine, possibly suggestive of increased oxidative stress. Intermediary metabolic flux analysis by GC/MS with 1,6-13C2-glucose further showed both PCC deletion strains had decreased accumulation of a distal tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolic intermediate (+1 malate), isotopic enrichment in a proximal TCA cycle intermediate (+1 citrate), and increased +1 lactate accumulation. GC/MS analysis further revealed accumulation in the PCC mutants of a small amount of 3-hydroxypropionate, which appeared to be metabolized in C. elegans to oxalate through a unique metabolic pathway. Collectively, these detailed metabolic investigations in translational PA model animals with genetic-based PCC deficiency reveal their significantly dysregulated energy metabolism at multiple levels, including reduced mitochondrial OXPHOS capacity, increased oxidative stress, and inhibition of distal TCA cycle flux, culminating in reduced animal lifespan. These findings demonstrate that the pathophysiology of PA extends well beyond what has classically been understood as a single PCC enzyme deficiency with toxic precursor accumulation, and suggest that therapeutically targeting the globally disrupted energy metabolism may offer novel treatment opportunities for PA. SUMMARY: Two C. elegans model animals of propionic acidemia with single-gene pcca-1 or pccb-1 deletions have reduced lifespan with significantly reduced mitochondrial energy metabolism and increased oxidative stress, reflecting the disease's broader pathophysiology beyond a single enzyme deficiency with toxic precursor accumulation.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Gene Deletion , Methylmalonyl-CoA Decarboxylase/genetics , Mitochondria/genetics , Propionic Acidemia/genetics , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/enzymology , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Longevity/genetics , Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial/genetics , Methylmalonyl-CoA Decarboxylase/metabolism , Mitochondria/enzymology , Oxidative Stress/genetics , Phenotype , Propionic Acidemia/enzymology
7.
Hum Mol Genet ; 24(17): 4829-47, 2015 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26041819

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) disease therapies directed at intra-mitochondrial pathology are largely ineffective. Recognizing that RC dysfunction invokes pronounced extra-mitochondrial transcriptional adaptations, particularly involving dysregulated translation, we hypothesized that translational dysregulation is itself contributing to the pathophysiology of RC disease. Here, we investigated the activities, and effects from direct inhibition, of a central translational regulator (mTORC1) and its downstream biological processes in diverse genetic and pharmacological models of RC disease. Our data identify novel mechanisms underlying the cellular pathogenesis of RC dysfunction, including the combined induction of proteotoxic stress, the ER stress response and autophagy. mTORC1 inhibition with rapamycin partially ameliorated renal disease in B6.Pdss2(kd/kd) mice with complexes I-III/II-III deficiencies, improved viability and mitochondrial physiology in gas-1(fc21) nematodes with complex I deficiency, and rescued viability across a variety of RC-inhibited human cells. Even more effective was probucol, a PPAR-activating anti-lipid drug that we show also inhibits mTORC1. However, directly inhibiting mTORC1-regulated downstream activities yielded the most pronounced and sustained benefit. Partial inhibition of translation by cycloheximide, or of autophagy by lithium chloride, rescued viability, preserved cellular respiratory capacity and induced mitochondrial translation and biogenesis. Cycloheximide also ameliorated proteotoxic stress via a uniquely selective reduction of cytosolic protein translation. RNAseq-based transcriptome profiling of treatment effects in gas-1(fc21) mutants provide further evidence that these therapies effectively restored altered translation and autophagy pathways toward that of wild-type animals. Overall, partially inhibiting cytosolic translation and autophagy offer novel treatment strategies to improve health across the diverse array of human diseases whose pathogenesis involves RC dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Autophagy , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Mitochondrial Diseases/metabolism , Protein Biosynthesis , Animals , Autophagy/drug effects , Autophagy/genetics , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cycloheximide/pharmacology , Cytosol , Disease Models, Animal , Electron Transport , Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress/drug effects , Enzyme Activation , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondria/metabolism , Models, Biological , Multiprotein Complexes/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Probucol/pharmacology , Protein Biosynthesis/drug effects , Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinases/metabolism , Sirolimus/pharmacology , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Transcriptome
8.
Mitochondrion ; 22: 45-59, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25744875

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) diseases are highly morbid multi-systemic conditions for which few effective therapies exist. Given the essential role of sirtuin and PPAR signaling in mediating both mitochondrial physiology and the cellular response to metabolic stress in RC complex I (CI) disease, we postulated that drugs that alter these signaling pathways either directly (resveratrol for sirtuin, rosiglitazone for PPARγ, fenofibrate for PPARα), or indirectly by increasing NAD(+) availability (nicotinic acid), might offer effective treatment strategies for primary RC disease. Integrated effects of targeting these cellular signaling pathways on animal lifespan and multi-dimensional in vivo parameters were studied in gas-1(fc21) relative to wild-type (N2 Bristol) worms. Specifically, animal lifespan, transcriptome profiles, mitochondrial oxidant burden, mitochondrial membrane potential, mitochondrial content, amino acid profiles, stable isotope-based intermediary metabolic flux, and total nematode NADH and NAD(+) concentrations were compared. Shortened gas-1(fc21) mutant lifespan was rescued with either resveratrol or nicotinic acid, regardless of whether treatments were begun at the early larval stage or in young adulthood. Rosiglitazone administration beginning in young adult stage animals also rescued lifespan. All drug treatments reversed the most significant transcriptome alterations at the biochemical pathway level relative to untreated gas-1(fc21) animals. Interestingly, increased mitochondrial oxidant burden in gas-1(fc21) was reduced with nicotinic acid but exacerbated significantly by resveratrol and modestly by fenofibrate, with little change by rosiglitazone treatment. In contrast, the reduced mitochondrial membrane potential of mutant worms was further decreased by nicotinic acid but restored by either resveratrol, rosiglitazone, or fenofibrate. Using a novel HPLC assay, we discovered that gas-1(fc21) worms have significant deficiencies of NAD(+) and NADH. Whereas resveratrol restored concentrations of both metabolites, nicotinic acid only restored NADH. Characteristic branched chain amino acid elevations in gas-1(fc21) animals were normalized completely by nicotinic acid and largely by resveratrol, but not by either rosiglitazone or fenofibrate. We developed a visualization system to enable objective integration of these multi-faceted physiologic endpoints, an approach that will likely be useful to apply in future drug treatment studies in human patients with mitochondrial disease. Overall, these data demonstrate that direct or indirect pharmacologic restoration of altered sirtuin and PPAR signaling can yield significant health and longevity benefits, although by divergent bioenergetic mechanism(s), in a nematode model of mitochondrial RC complex I disease. Thus, these animal model studies introduce important, integrated insights that may ultimately yield rational treatment strategies for human RC disease.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/physiology , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Electron Transport Complex I/metabolism , Mitochondria/enzymology , Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Sirtuins/metabolism , Animals , Longevity , Mitochondria/physiology , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Mutant Proteins/metabolism
9.
J Mol Biol ; 426(11): 2199-216, 2014 May 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24534730

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation can influence the penetrance of complex diseases and climatic adaptation. While studies in geographically defined human populations suggest that mtDNA mutations become fixed when they have conferred metabolic capabilities optimally suited for a specific environment, it has been challenging to definitively assign adaptive functions to specific mtDNA sequence variants in mammals. We investigated whether mtDNA genome variation functionally influences Caenorhabditis elegans wild isolates of distinct mtDNA lineages and geographic origins. We found that, relative to N2 (England) wild-type nematodes, CB4856 wild isolates from a warmer native climate (Hawaii) had a unique p.A12S amino acid substitution in the mtDNA-encoded COX1 core catalytic subunit of mitochondrial complex IV (CIV). Relative to N2, CB4856 worms grown at 20°C had significantly increased CIV enzyme activity, mitochondrial matrix oxidant burden, and sensitivity to oxidative stress but had significantly reduced lifespan and mitochondrial membrane potential. Interestingly, mitochondrial membrane potential was significantly increased in CB4856 grown at its native temperature of 25°C. A transmitochondrial cybrid worm strain, chpIR (M, CB4856>N2), was bred as homoplasmic for the CB4856 mtDNA genome in the N2 nuclear background. The cybrid strain also displayed significantly increased CIV activity, demonstrating that this difference results from the mtDNA-encoded p.A12S variant. However, chpIR (M, CB4856>N2) worms had significantly reduced median and maximal lifespan relative to CB4856, which may relate to their nuclear-mtDNA genome mismatch. Overall, these data suggest that C. elegans wild isolates of varying geographic origins may adapt to environmental challenges through mtDNA variation to modulate critical aspects of mitochondrial energy metabolism.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans/enzymology , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Electron Transport Complex IV/metabolism , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Mitochondria/enzymology , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans/isolation & purification , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Cell Respiration/genetics , Electron Transport Complex IV/chemistry , Genetic Variation , Geography , Male , Models, Molecular
10.
Mol Genet Metab ; 111(3): 331-341, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24445252

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) disease diagnosis is complicated both by an absence of biomarkers that sufficiently divulge all cases and limited capacity to quantify adverse effects across intermediary metabolism. We applied high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and mass spectrometry (MS) studies of stable-isotope based precursor-product relationships in the nematode, C. elegans, to interrogate in vivo differences in metabolic flux among distinct genetic models of primary RC defects and closely related metabolic disorders. METHODS: C. elegans strains studied harbor single nuclear gene defects in complex I, II, or III RC subunits (gas-1, mev-1, isp-1); enzymes involved in coenzyme Q biosynthesis (clk-1), the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA, idh-1), or pyruvate metabolism (pdha-1); and central nodes of the nutrient-sensing signaling network that involve insulin response (daf-2) or the sirtuin homologue (sir-2.1). Synchronous populations of 2000 early larval stage worms were fed standard Escherichia coli on nematode growth media plates containing 1,6-(13)C2-glucose throughout their developmental period, with samples extracted on the first day of adult life in 4% perchloric acid with an internal standard. Quantitation of whole animal free amino acid concentrations and isotopic incorporation into amino and organic acids throughout development was performed in all strains by HPLC and isotope ratio MS, respectively. GC/MS analysis was also performed to quantify absolute isotopic incorporation in all molecular species of key TCA cycle intermediates in gas-1 and N2 adult worms. RESULTS: Genetic mutations within different metabolic pathways displayed distinct metabolic profiles. RC complex I (gas-1) and III (isp-1) subunit mutants, together with the coenzyme Q biosynthetic mutant (clk-1), shared a similar amino acid profile of elevated alanine and decreased glutamate. The metabolic signature of the complex II mutant (mev-1) was distinct from that of the other RC mutants but resembled that of the TCA cycle mutant (idh-1) and both signaling mutants (daf-2 and sir-2.1). All branched chain amino acid levels were significantly increased in the complex I and III mutants but decreased in the PDH mutant (pdha-1). The RC complex I, coenzyme Q, TCA cycle, and PDH mutants shared significantly increased relative enrichment of lactate+1 and absolute concentration of alanine+1, while glutamate+1 enrichment was significantly decreased uniquely in the RC mutants. Relative intermediary flux analyses were suggestive of proximal TCA cycle disruption in idh-1, completely reduced TCA cycle flux in sir-2.1, and apparent distal TCA cycle alteration in daf-2. GC/MS analysis with universally-labeled (13)C-glucose in adult worms further showed significantly increased isotopic enrichment in lactate, citrate, and malate species in the complex I (gas-1) mutant. CONCLUSIONS: Stable isotopic/mass spectrometric analysis can sensitively discriminate primary RC dysfunction from genetic deficiencies affecting either the TCA cycle or pyruvate metabolism. These data are further suggestive that metabolic flux analysis using stable isotopes may offer a robust means to discriminate and quantify the secondary effects of primary RC dysfunction across intermediary metabolism.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Electron Transport Complex II/genetics , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Mitochondria/pathology , Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/enzymology , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/biosynthesis , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Electron Transport Complex I/metabolism , Electron Transport Complex II/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Humans , Isotope Labeling , Mass Spectrometry , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondrial Diseases/metabolism , Mitochondrial Diseases/pathology , Mutation
11.
Am J Hum Genet ; 93(3): 482-95, 2013 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23993194

ABSTRACT

Whole-exome sequencing and autozygosity mapping studies, independently performed in subjects with defective combined mitochondrial OXPHOS-enzyme deficiencies, identified a total of nine disease-segregating FBXL4 mutations in seven unrelated mitochondrial disease families, composed of six singletons and three siblings. All subjects manifested early-onset lactic acidemia, hypotonia, and developmental delay caused by severe encephalomyopathy consistently associated with progressive cerebral atrophy and variable involvement of the white matter, deep gray nuclei, and brainstem structures. A wide range of other multisystem features were variably seen, including dysmorphism, skeletal abnormalities, poor growth, gastrointestinal dysmotility, renal tubular acidosis, seizures, and episodic metabolic failure. Mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency was present in muscle or fibroblasts of all tested individuals, together with markedly reduced oxygen consumption rate and hyperfragmentation of the mitochondrial network in cultured cells. In muscle and fibroblasts from several subjects, substantially decreased mtDNA content was observed. FBXL4 is a member of the F-box family of proteins, some of which are involved in phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitination and/or G protein receptor coupling. We also demonstrate that FBXL4 is targeted to mitochondria and localizes in the intermembrane space, where it participates in an approximately 400 kDa protein complex. These data strongly support a role for FBXL4 in controlling bioenergetic homeostasis and mtDNA maintenance. FBXL4 mutations are a recurrent cause of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy onset in early infancy.


Subject(s)
Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies/genetics , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Age of Onset , Child , Child, Preschool , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 6/genetics , DNA, Complementary/genetics , F-Box Proteins/chemistry , F-Box Proteins/genetics , Female , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fibroblasts/pathology , Genes, Recessive/genetics , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies/epidemiology , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Oxidative Phosphorylation , Pedigree , Protein Transport , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism , Syndrome , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/chemistry , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics
12.
PLoS One ; 8(7): e69282, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23894440

ABSTRACT

Primary mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) diseases are heterogeneous in etiology and manifestations but collectively impair cellular energy metabolism. Mechanism(s) by which RC dysfunction causes global cellular sequelae are poorly understood. To identify a common cellular response to RC disease, integrated gene, pathway, and systems biology analyses were performed in human primary RC disease skeletal muscle and fibroblast transcriptomes. Significant changes were evident in muscle across diverse RC complex and genetic etiologies that were consistent with prior reports in other primary RC disease models and involved dysregulation of genes involved in RNA processing, protein translation, transport, and degradation, and muscle structure. Global transcriptional and post-transcriptional dysregulation was also found to occur in a highly tissue-specific fashion. In particular, RC disease muscle had decreased transcription of cytosolic ribosomal proteins suggestive of reduced anabolic processes, increased transcription of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, shorter 5'-UTRs that likely improve translational efficiency, and stabilization of 3'-UTRs containing AU-rich elements. RC disease fibroblasts showed a strikingly similar pattern of global transcriptome dysregulation in a reverse direction. In parallel with these transcriptional effects, RC disease dysregulated the integrated nutrient-sensing signaling network involving FOXO, PPAR, sirtuins, AMPK, and mTORC1, which collectively sense nutrient availability and regulate cellular growth. Altered activities of central nodes in the nutrient-sensing signaling network were validated by phosphokinase immunoblot analysis in RC inhibited cells. Remarkably, treating RC mutant fibroblasts with nicotinic acid to enhance sirtuin and PPAR activity also normalized mTORC1 and AMPK signaling, restored NADH/NAD(+) redox balance, and improved cellular respiratory capacity. These data specifically highlight a common pathogenesis extending across different molecular and biochemical etiologies of individual RC disorders that involves global transcriptome modifications. We further identify the integrated nutrient-sensing signaling network as a common cellular response that mediates, and may be amenable to targeted therapies for, tissue-specific sequelae of primary mitochondrial RC disease.


Subject(s)
Mitochondrial Diseases/genetics , Transcriptome/genetics , 3' Untranslated Regions/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cell Line , Child , Child, Preschool , Electron Transport/genetics , Electron Transport/physiology , Female , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , Mitochondrial Diseases/physiopathology , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Signal Transduction/genetics , Signal Transduction/physiology , Young Adult
13.
Nat Genet ; 44(9): 1040-5, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22842227

ABSTRACT

Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) is an infantile-onset form of inherited retinal degeneration characterized by severe vision loss(1,2). Two-thirds of LCA cases are caused by mutations in 17 known disease-associated genes(3) (Retinal Information Network (RetNet)). Using exome sequencing we identified a homozygous missense mutation (c.25G>A, p.Val9Met) in NMNAT1 that is likely to be disease causing in two siblings of a consanguineous Pakistani kindred affected by LCA. This mutation segregated with disease in the kindred, including in three other children with LCA. NMNAT1 resides in the previously identified LCA9 locus and encodes the nuclear isoform of nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase, a rate-limiting enzyme in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) biosynthesis(4,5). Functional studies showed that the p.Val9Met alteration decreased NMNAT1 enzyme activity. Sequencing NMNAT1 in 284 unrelated families with LCA identified 14 rare mutations in 13 additional affected individuals. These results are the first to link an NMNAT isoform to disease in humans and indicate that NMNAT1 mutations cause LCA.


Subject(s)
Leber Congenital Amaurosis/genetics , Mutation , Nicotinamide-Nucleotide Adenylyltransferase/genetics , Base Sequence , Case-Control Studies , Child , Child, Preschool , DNA Mutational Analysis , Family , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Leber Congenital Amaurosis/complications , Male , Mutation/physiology , Nicotinamide-Nucleotide Adenylyltransferase/physiology , Pedigree , Retinal Degeneration/complications , Retinal Degeneration/diagnosis , Retinal Degeneration/genetics
14.
EMBO Mol Med ; 3(7): 410-27, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21567994

ABSTRACT

Therapy of mitochondrial respiratory chain diseases is complicated by limited understanding of cellular mechanisms that cause the widely variable clinical findings. Here, we show that focal segmental glomerulopathy-like kidney disease in Pdss2 mutant animals with primary coenzyme Q (CoQ) deficiency is significantly ameliorated by oral treatment with probucol (1% w/w). Preventative effects in missense mutant mice are similar whether fed probucol from weaning or for 3 weeks prior to typical nephritis onset. Furthermore, treating symptomatic animals for 2 weeks with probucol significantly reduces albuminuria. Probucol has a more pronounced health benefit than high-dose CoQ(10) supplementation and uniquely restores CoQ(9) content in mutant kidney. Probucol substantially mitigates transcriptional alterations across many intermediary metabolic domains, including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) pathway signaling. Probucol's beneficial effects on the renal and metabolic manifestations of Pdss2 disease occur despite modest induction of oxidant stress and appear independent of its hypolipidemic effects. Rather, decreased CoQ(9) content and altered PPAR pathway signaling appear, respectively, to orchestrate the glomerular and global metabolic consequences of primary CoQ deficiency, which are both preventable and treatable with oral probucol therapy.


Subject(s)
Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/genetics , Energy Metabolism/drug effects , Kidney/drug effects , Kidney/metabolism , Probucol/pharmacology , Ubiquinone/deficiency , Albuminuria/drug therapy , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/metabolism , Animals , Anticholesteremic Agents/pharmacology , Anticholesteremic Agents/therapeutic use , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Antioxidants/therapeutic use , Female , Hyperglycemia/drug therapy , Kidney/pathology , Kidney Diseases/drug therapy , Kidney Diseases/pathology , Kidney Diseases/physiopathology , Male , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mutation, Missense , Oxidative Stress , Probucol/therapeutic use , Signal Transduction/physiology
15.
J Vis Exp ; (48)2011 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21403629

ABSTRACT

Stable isotopic profiling has long permitted sensitive investigations of the metabolic consequences of genetic mutations and/or pharmacologic therapies in cellular and mammalian models. Here, we describe detailed methods to perform stable isotopic profiling of intermediary metabolism and metabolic flux in the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans. Methods are described for profiling whole worm free amino acids, labeled carbon dioxide, labeled organic acids, and labeled amino acids in animals exposed to stable isotopes either from early development on nematode growth media agar plates or beginning as young adults while exposed to various pharmacologic treatments in liquid culture. Free amino acids are quantified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in whole worm aliquots extracted in 4% perchloric acid. Universally labeled (13)C-glucose or 1,6-(13)C(2)-glucose is utilized as the stable isotopic precursor whose labeled carbon is traced by mass spectrometry in carbon dioxide (both atmospheric and dissolved) as well as in metabolites indicative of flux through glycolysis, pyruvate metabolism, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Representative results are included to demonstrate effects of isotope exposure time, various bacterial clearing protocols, and alternative worm disruption methods in wild-type nematodes, as well as the relative extent of isotopic incorporation in mitochondrial complex III mutant worms (isp-1(qm150)) relative to wild-type worms. Application of stable isotopic profiling in living nematodes provides a novel capacity to investigate at the whole animal level real-time metabolic alterations that are caused by individual genetic disorders and/or pharmacologic therapies.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Isotope Labeling/methods , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/growth & development
16.
Mitochondrion ; 10(2): 125-36, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19900588

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial dysfunction and associated oxidant stress have been linked with numerous complex diseases and aging largely by in vitro determination of mitochondria oxidant production and scavenging. We applied targeted in vivo fluorescence analyses of mitochondria-dense pharyngeal tissue in Caenorhabditis elegans to better understand relative mitochondrial effects, particularly on matrix oxidant burden, of respiratory chain complex, MnSOD, and insulin receptor mutants displaying variable longevity. The data demonstrate significantly elevated in vivo matrix oxidant burden in the short-lived complex I mutant, gas-1(fc21), which was associated with limited superoxide scavenging capacity despite robust MnSOD induction, as well as decreased mitochondria content and membrane potential. Significantly increased MnSOD activity was associated with in vivo matrix oxidant levels similar to wild-type in the long-lived respiratory chain complex III mutant, isp-1(qm150). Yet, despite greater superoxide scavenging capacity in the complex III mutant than in the significantly longer-lived insulin receptor mutant, daf-2(e1368), only the former showed modest oxidative stress sensitivity. Furthermore, increased longevity was seen in MnSOD knockout mutants (sod-2(ok1030) and sod-2(gk257)) that had decreased MnSOD scavenging capacity and increased in vivo matrix oxidant burden. Thus, factors beside oxidant stress must underlie RC mutant longevity in C. elegans. This work highlights the utility of the C. elegans model as a tractable means to non-invasively monitor multi-dimensional in vivo consequences of primary mitochondrial dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/physiology , Electron Transport , Mitochondria/physiology , Oxidants/toxicity , Oxidative Stress , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins , Electron Transport Complex III/deficiency , Longevity , Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial , NADH Dehydrogenase/deficiency , Receptor, Insulin/deficiency , Superoxide Dismutase/deficiency
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...