Evidence for Mitochondrial UPR Gene Activation in Familial and Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease.
2016
Mitochondrial perturbations such as oxidative stress, increased fission/fusion dysfunction,
and mitophagy are consistent features of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), yet the mechanisms that initiate
these perturbations are unclear. One potential source for mitochondrial defects could be an imbalance
in mitochondrial proteostasis. In this regard, studies indicate that a specialized mitochondrial unfolded
protein response (mtUPR) is activated upon the aberrant accumulation of damaged or unfolded proteins in the mitochondrial
matrix, resulting in the up-regulation of key genes involved in mitochondrial stabilization. To test whether mtUPR
activation occurs in AD, we performed real-time quantitative PCR on postmortem frontal cortex samples from subjects
classified as sporadic AD, familial AD linked to presenilin-1 mutations, or cognitively intact controls. Compared to controls,
sporadic AD subjects exhibited a significant ~40-60% increase in expression levels of select genes activated by the
mtUPR, including mitochondrial chaperones dnaja3, hspd1, and hspe1, mitochondrial proteases clpp and yme1l1, and
txn2, a mitochondrial-specific oxidoreductase. Furthermore, levels of all six mtUPR genes were significantly up-regulated
by ~70-90% in familial AD compared to controls, and these expression levels were significantly higher compared to sporadic
AD. The increase in hspd1 (Hsp60) was validated by western blotting. These data support the concept that both sporadic
and familial AD are characterized by mtUPR gene activation. Understanding the physiological consequences of this
response may provide subcellular mechanistic clues to selective neuronal vulnerability or endogenous compensatory
mechanisms during the progression of AD.
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