Cargando…

Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state

Huntington disease (HD) is an incurable neurodegenerative disease characterized by neuronal loss and astrogliosis. One hallmark of HD is the selective neuronal vulnerability of striatal medium spiny neurons. To date, the underlying mechanisms of this selective vulnerability have not been fully defin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Paryani, Fahad, Kwon, Ji-Sun, Ng, Chris W, Madden, Nacoya, Ofori, Kenneth, Tang, Alice, Lu, Hong, Li, Juncheng, Mahajan, Aayushi, Davidson, Shawn M., Basile, Anna, McHugh, Caitlin, Vonsattel, Jean Paul, Hickman, Richard, Zody, Michael, Houseman, David E., Goldman, James E., Yoo, Andrew S., Menon, Vilas, Al-Dalahmah, Osama
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37745577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.08.556867
_version_ 1785109018761494528
author Paryani, Fahad
Kwon, Ji-Sun
Ng, Chris W
Madden, Nacoya
Ofori, Kenneth
Tang, Alice
Lu, Hong
Li, Juncheng
Mahajan, Aayushi
Davidson, Shawn M.
Basile, Anna
McHugh, Caitlin
Vonsattel, Jean Paul
Hickman, Richard
Zody, Michael
Houseman, David E.
Goldman, James E.
Yoo, Andrew S.
Menon, Vilas
Al-Dalahmah, Osama
author_facet Paryani, Fahad
Kwon, Ji-Sun
Ng, Chris W
Madden, Nacoya
Ofori, Kenneth
Tang, Alice
Lu, Hong
Li, Juncheng
Mahajan, Aayushi
Davidson, Shawn M.
Basile, Anna
McHugh, Caitlin
Vonsattel, Jean Paul
Hickman, Richard
Zody, Michael
Houseman, David E.
Goldman, James E.
Yoo, Andrew S.
Menon, Vilas
Al-Dalahmah, Osama
author_sort Paryani, Fahad
collection PubMed
description Huntington disease (HD) is an incurable neurodegenerative disease characterized by neuronal loss and astrogliosis. One hallmark of HD is the selective neuronal vulnerability of striatal medium spiny neurons. To date, the underlying mechanisms of this selective vulnerability have not been fully defined. Here, we employed a multi-omic approach including single nucleus RNAseq (snRNAseq), bulk RNAseq, lipidomics, HTT gene CAG repeat length measurements, and multiplexed immunofluorescence on post-mortem brain tissue from multiple brain regions of HD and control donors. We defined a signature of genes that is driven by CAG repeat length and found it enriched in astrocytic and microglial genes. Moreover, weighted gene correlation network analysis showed loss of connectivity of astrocytic and microglial modules in HD and identified modules that correlated with CAG-repeat length which further implicated inflammatory pathways and metabolism. We performed lipidomic analysis of HD and control brains and identified several lipid species that correlate with HD grade, including ceramides and very long chain fatty acids. Integration of lipidomics and bulk transcriptomics identified a consensus gene signature that correlates with HD grade and HD lipidomic abnormalities and implicated the unfolded protein response pathway. Because astrocytes are critical for brain lipid metabolism and play important roles in regulating inflammation, we analyzed our snRNAseq dataset with an emphasis on astrocyte pathology. We found two main astrocyte types that spanned multiple brain regions; these types correspond to protoplasmic astrocytes, and fibrous-like - CD44-positive, astrocytes. HD pathology was differentially associated with these cell types in a region-specific manner. One protoplasmic astrocyte cluster showed high expression of metallothionein genes, the depletion of this cluster positively correlated with the depletion of vulnerable medium spiny neurons in the caudate nucleus. We confirmed that metallothioneins were increased in cingulate HD astrocytes but were unchanged or even decreased in caudate astrocytes. We combined existing genome-wide association studies (GWAS) with a GWA study conducted on HD patients from the original Venezuelan cohort and identified a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the metallothionein gene locus associated with delayed age of onset. Functional studies found that metallothionein overexpressing astrocytes are better able to buffer glutamate and were neuroprotective of patient-derived directly reprogrammed HD MSNs as well as against rotenone-induced neuronal death in vitro. Finally, we found that metallothionein-overexpressing astrocytes increased the phagocytic activity of microglia in vitro and increased the expression of genes involved in fatty acid binding. Together, we identified an astrocytic phenotype that is regionally-enriched in less vulnerable brain regions that can be leveraged to protect neurons in HD.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10515780
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105157802023-09-23 Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state Paryani, Fahad Kwon, Ji-Sun Ng, Chris W Madden, Nacoya Ofori, Kenneth Tang, Alice Lu, Hong Li, Juncheng Mahajan, Aayushi Davidson, Shawn M. Basile, Anna McHugh, Caitlin Vonsattel, Jean Paul Hickman, Richard Zody, Michael Houseman, David E. Goldman, James E. Yoo, Andrew S. Menon, Vilas Al-Dalahmah, Osama bioRxiv Article Huntington disease (HD) is an incurable neurodegenerative disease characterized by neuronal loss and astrogliosis. One hallmark of HD is the selective neuronal vulnerability of striatal medium spiny neurons. To date, the underlying mechanisms of this selective vulnerability have not been fully defined. Here, we employed a multi-omic approach including single nucleus RNAseq (snRNAseq), bulk RNAseq, lipidomics, HTT gene CAG repeat length measurements, and multiplexed immunofluorescence on post-mortem brain tissue from multiple brain regions of HD and control donors. We defined a signature of genes that is driven by CAG repeat length and found it enriched in astrocytic and microglial genes. Moreover, weighted gene correlation network analysis showed loss of connectivity of astrocytic and microglial modules in HD and identified modules that correlated with CAG-repeat length which further implicated inflammatory pathways and metabolism. We performed lipidomic analysis of HD and control brains and identified several lipid species that correlate with HD grade, including ceramides and very long chain fatty acids. Integration of lipidomics and bulk transcriptomics identified a consensus gene signature that correlates with HD grade and HD lipidomic abnormalities and implicated the unfolded protein response pathway. Because astrocytes are critical for brain lipid metabolism and play important roles in regulating inflammation, we analyzed our snRNAseq dataset with an emphasis on astrocyte pathology. We found two main astrocyte types that spanned multiple brain regions; these types correspond to protoplasmic astrocytes, and fibrous-like - CD44-positive, astrocytes. HD pathology was differentially associated with these cell types in a region-specific manner. One protoplasmic astrocyte cluster showed high expression of metallothionein genes, the depletion of this cluster positively correlated with the depletion of vulnerable medium spiny neurons in the caudate nucleus. We confirmed that metallothioneins were increased in cingulate HD astrocytes but were unchanged or even decreased in caudate astrocytes. We combined existing genome-wide association studies (GWAS) with a GWA study conducted on HD patients from the original Venezuelan cohort and identified a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the metallothionein gene locus associated with delayed age of onset. Functional studies found that metallothionein overexpressing astrocytes are better able to buffer glutamate and were neuroprotective of patient-derived directly reprogrammed HD MSNs as well as against rotenone-induced neuronal death in vitro. Finally, we found that metallothionein-overexpressing astrocytes increased the phagocytic activity of microglia in vitro and increased the expression of genes involved in fatty acid binding. Together, we identified an astrocytic phenotype that is regionally-enriched in less vulnerable brain regions that can be leveraged to protect neurons in HD. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10515780/ /pubmed/37745577 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.08.556867 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Paryani, Fahad
Kwon, Ji-Sun
Ng, Chris W
Madden, Nacoya
Ofori, Kenneth
Tang, Alice
Lu, Hong
Li, Juncheng
Mahajan, Aayushi
Davidson, Shawn M.
Basile, Anna
McHugh, Caitlin
Vonsattel, Jean Paul
Hickman, Richard
Zody, Michael
Houseman, David E.
Goldman, James E.
Yoo, Andrew S.
Menon, Vilas
Al-Dalahmah, Osama
Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title_full Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title_fullStr Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title_full_unstemmed Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title_short Multi-OMIC analysis of Huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
title_sort multi-omic analysis of huntington disease reveals a neuroprotective astrocyte state
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37745577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.08.556867
work_keys_str_mv AT paryanifahad multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT kwonjisun multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT ngchrisw multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT maddennacoya multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT oforikenneth multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT tangalice multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT luhong multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT lijuncheng multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT mahajanaayushi multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT davidsonshawnm multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT basileanna multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT mchughcaitlin multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT vonsatteljeanpaul multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT hickmanrichard multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT zodymichael multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT housemandavide multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT goldmanjamese multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT yooandrews multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT menonvilas multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate
AT aldalahmahosama multiomicanalysisofhuntingtondiseaserevealsaneuroprotectiveastrocytestate