Journal article

Pathogenic variants in the AFG3L2 proteolytic domain cause SCA28 through haploinsufficiency and proteostatic stress-driven OMA1 activation


Authors listTulli, Susanna; Del Bondio, Andrea; Baderna, Valentina; Mazza, Davide; Codazzi, Franca; Pierson, Tyler Mark; Ambrosi, Alessandro; Nolte, Dagmar; Goizet, Cyril; Toro, Camilo; Baets, Jonathan; Deconinck, Tine; DeJonghe, Peter; Mandich, Paola; Casari, Giorgio; Maltecca, Francesca

Publication year2019

Pages499-511

JournalJournal of Medical Genetics

Volume number56

Issue number8

ISSN0022-2593

eISSN1468-6244

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105766

PublisherBMJ Publishing Group


Abstract
Background Spinocerebellar ataxia type 28 (SCA28) is a dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disease caused by pathogenic variants in AFG3L2. The AFG3L2 protein is a subunit of mitochondrial m-AAA complexes involved in protein quality control. Objective of this study was to determine the molecular mechanisms of SCA28, which has eluded characterisation to date. Methods We derived SCA28 patient fibroblasts carrying different pathogenic variants in the AFG3L2 proteolytic domain (missense: the newly identified p.F664S and p.M666T, p.G671R, p.Y689H and a truncating frameshift p.L556fs) and analysed multiple aspects of mitochondrial physiology. As reference of residual m-AAA activity, we included SPAX5 patient fibroblasts with homozygous p.Y616C pathogenic variant, AFG3L2(+/-) HEK293 T cells by CRISPR/Cas9-genome editing and Afg3l2(-/-) murine fibroblasts. Results We found that SCA28 cells carrying missense changes have normal levels of assembled m-AAA complexes, while the cells with a truncating pathogenic variant had only half of this amount. We disclosed inefficient mitochondrial fusion in SCA28 cells caused by increased OPA1 processing operated by hyperactivated OMA1. Notably, we found altered mitochondrial proteostasis to be the trigger of OMA1 activation in SCA28 cells, with pharmacological attenuation of mitochondrial protein synthesis resulting in stabilised levels of OMA1 and OPA1 long forms, which rescued mitochondrial fusion efficiency. Secondary to altered mitochondrial morphology, mitochondrial calcium uptake resulted decreased in SCA28 cells. Conclusion Our data identify the earliest events in SCA28 pathogenesis and open new perspectives for therapy. By identifying similar mitochondrial phenotypes between SCA28 cells and AFG3L2(+/-) cells, our results support haploinsufficiency as the mechanism for the studied pathogenic variants.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleTulli, S., Del Bondio, A., Baderna, V., Mazza, D., Codazzi, F., Pierson, T., et al. (2019) Pathogenic variants in the AFG3L2 proteolytic domain cause SCA28 through haploinsufficiency and proteostatic stress-driven OMA1 activation, Journal of Medical Genetics, 56(8), pp. 499-511. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105766

APA Citation styleTulli, S., Del Bondio, A., Baderna, V., Mazza, D., Codazzi, F., Pierson, T., Ambrosi, A., Nolte, D., Goizet, C., Toro, C., Baets, J., Deconinck, T., DeJonghe, P., Mandich, P., Casari, G., & Maltecca, F. (2019). Pathogenic variants in the AFG3L2 proteolytic domain cause SCA28 through haploinsufficiency and proteostatic stress-driven OMA1 activation. Journal of Medical Genetics. 56(8), 499-511. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2018-105766



Keywords


ATAXIACELL BIOLOGYearly-onsetM-AAA PROTEASEMITOCHONDRIAL FUSIONmovement disorders (other than parkinsons)OPA1TURNOVER

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:03