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Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene

The X-linked FMR1 gene contains a non-coding trinucleotide repeat in its 5’ region that, in normal, healthy individuals contains 20–44 copies. Large expansions of this region (>200 copies) cause fragile X syndrome (FXS), but expansions of 55–199 copies (referred to as premutation alleles) predisp...

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Autores principales: Fisher, Paul R., Allan, Claire Y., Sanislav, Oana, Atkinson, Anna, Ngoei, Kevin R. W., Kemp, Bruce E., Storey, Elsdon, Loesch, Danuta Z., Annesley, Sarah J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8508849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34638732
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221910393
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author Fisher, Paul R.
Allan, Claire Y.
Sanislav, Oana
Atkinson, Anna
Ngoei, Kevin R. W.
Kemp, Bruce E.
Storey, Elsdon
Loesch, Danuta Z.
Annesley, Sarah J.
author_facet Fisher, Paul R.
Allan, Claire Y.
Sanislav, Oana
Atkinson, Anna
Ngoei, Kevin R. W.
Kemp, Bruce E.
Storey, Elsdon
Loesch, Danuta Z.
Annesley, Sarah J.
author_sort Fisher, Paul R.
collection PubMed
description The X-linked FMR1 gene contains a non-coding trinucleotide repeat in its 5’ region that, in normal, healthy individuals contains 20–44 copies. Large expansions of this region (>200 copies) cause fragile X syndrome (FXS), but expansions of 55–199 copies (referred to as premutation alleles) predispose carriers to a neurodegenerative disease called fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS). The cytopathological mechanisms underlying FXTAS are poorly understood, but abnormalities in mitochondrial function are believed to play a role. We previously reported that lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs, or lymphoblasts) of premutation carriers have elevated mitochondrial respiratory activities. In the carriers, especially those not clinically affected with FXTAS, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activity was shown to be elevated. In the FXTAS patients, however, it was negatively correlated with brain white matter lesions, suggesting a protective role in the molecular mechanisms. Here, we report an enlarged and extended study of mitochondrial function and associated cellular stress-signaling pathways in lymphoblasts isolated from male and female premutation carriers, regardless of their clinical status, and healthy controls. The results confirmed the elevation of AMPK and mitochondrial respiratory activities and reduction in reactive O(2) species (ROS) levels in premutation cells and revealed for the first time that target of rapamycin complex I (TORC1) activities are reduced. Extensive correlation, multiple regression, and principal components analysis revealed the best fitting statistical explanations of these changes in terms of the other variables measured. These suggested which variables might be the most “proximal” regulators of the others in the extensive network of known causal interactions amongst the measured parameters of mitochondrial function and cellular stress signaling. In the resulting model, the premutation alleles activate AMPK and inhibit both TORC1 and ROS production, the reduced TORC1 activity contributes to activation of AMPK and of nonmitochondrial metabolism, and the higher AMPK activity results in elevated catabolic metabolism, mitochondrial respiration, and ATP steady state levels. In addition, the results suggest a separate CGG repeat number-dependent elevation of TORC1 activity that is insufficient to overcome the inhibition of TORC1 in premutation cells but may presage the previously reported activation of TORC1 in FXS cells.
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spelling pubmed-85088492021-10-13 Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene Fisher, Paul R. Allan, Claire Y. Sanislav, Oana Atkinson, Anna Ngoei, Kevin R. W. Kemp, Bruce E. Storey, Elsdon Loesch, Danuta Z. Annesley, Sarah J. Int J Mol Sci Article The X-linked FMR1 gene contains a non-coding trinucleotide repeat in its 5’ region that, in normal, healthy individuals contains 20–44 copies. Large expansions of this region (>200 copies) cause fragile X syndrome (FXS), but expansions of 55–199 copies (referred to as premutation alleles) predispose carriers to a neurodegenerative disease called fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS). The cytopathological mechanisms underlying FXTAS are poorly understood, but abnormalities in mitochondrial function are believed to play a role. We previously reported that lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs, or lymphoblasts) of premutation carriers have elevated mitochondrial respiratory activities. In the carriers, especially those not clinically affected with FXTAS, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activity was shown to be elevated. In the FXTAS patients, however, it was negatively correlated with brain white matter lesions, suggesting a protective role in the molecular mechanisms. Here, we report an enlarged and extended study of mitochondrial function and associated cellular stress-signaling pathways in lymphoblasts isolated from male and female premutation carriers, regardless of their clinical status, and healthy controls. The results confirmed the elevation of AMPK and mitochondrial respiratory activities and reduction in reactive O(2) species (ROS) levels in premutation cells and revealed for the first time that target of rapamycin complex I (TORC1) activities are reduced. Extensive correlation, multiple regression, and principal components analysis revealed the best fitting statistical explanations of these changes in terms of the other variables measured. These suggested which variables might be the most “proximal” regulators of the others in the extensive network of known causal interactions amongst the measured parameters of mitochondrial function and cellular stress signaling. In the resulting model, the premutation alleles activate AMPK and inhibit both TORC1 and ROS production, the reduced TORC1 activity contributes to activation of AMPK and of nonmitochondrial metabolism, and the higher AMPK activity results in elevated catabolic metabolism, mitochondrial respiration, and ATP steady state levels. In addition, the results suggest a separate CGG repeat number-dependent elevation of TORC1 activity that is insufficient to overcome the inhibition of TORC1 in premutation cells but may presage the previously reported activation of TORC1 in FXS cells. MDPI 2021-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8508849/ /pubmed/34638732 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221910393 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fisher, Paul R.
Allan, Claire Y.
Sanislav, Oana
Atkinson, Anna
Ngoei, Kevin R. W.
Kemp, Bruce E.
Storey, Elsdon
Loesch, Danuta Z.
Annesley, Sarah J.
Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title_full Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title_fullStr Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title_short Relationships between Mitochondrial Function, AMPK, and TORC1 Signaling in Lymphoblasts with Premutation Alleles of the FMR1 Gene
title_sort relationships between mitochondrial function, ampk, and torc1 signaling in lymphoblasts with premutation alleles of the fmr1 gene
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8508849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34638732
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms221910393
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