Skip to content
Preprint · CC-BY via bioRxiv

Loss of CLN3 in microglia leads to impaired lipid metabolism and myelin turnover

Yasa, S., Butz, E., Colombo, A., Chandrachud, U., Montore, L., Sheridan, S., Mueller, S. A., Lichtenthaler, S. F., Tahirovic, S., Cotman, S.

biorxiv · 2024

Abstract

BackgroundMicroglia are the primary brain cell type regulating neuroinflammation and they are important for healthy aging. Genes regulating microglial function are associated with an increased risk of neurodegenerative disease. Loss-of-function mutations in CLN3, which encodes an endolysosomal membrane protein, lead to the most common childhood-onset form of neurodegeneration, featuring early-stage neuroinflammation that long precedes neuronal cell loss. How loss of CLN3 function leads to this early neuroinflammation is not yet understood. MethodsHere, we have comprehensively studied microglia from Cln3{Delta}ex7/8 mice, a genetically accurate CLN3 disease model. Microglia were isolated from young and old Cln3{Delta}ex7/8 mice for downstream molecular and functional studies. ResultsWe show that loss of CLN3 function in microglia leads to classic age-dependent CLN3-disease lysosomal storage as well as an altered morphology of the lysosome, mitochonodria and Golgi compartments. Consistent with these morphological alterations, we also discovered pathological proteomic signatures implicating defects in lysosomal function and lipid metabolism processes at an early disease stage. CLN3-deficient microglia were unable to efficiently turnover myelin and metabolize its associated lipids, showing severe defects in lipid droplet formation and significant accumulation of cholesterol, phenotypes that were corrected by treatment with autophagy(definition) inducers and cholesterol lowering drugs. Finally, we observed reduced myelination in aging homozygous Cln3{Delta}ex7/8 mice suggesting altered myelin turnover by microglia impacts myelination in the CLN3-deficient brain. ConclusionOur results implicate a cell autonomous defect in CLN3-deficient microglia that impacts the ability of these cells to support neuronal cell health. These results strongly suggest microglial targeted therapies should be considered for CLN3 disease.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/2024.02.01.578018
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-05-31 MST

Cite this

APA
S., Y., E., B., A., C., U., C., L., M., S., S., A., M.S., F., L.S., S., T., &amp; S., C. (2024). Loss of CLN3 in microglia leads to impaired lipid metabolism and myelin turnover. <em>biorxiv</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.02.01.578018
Vancouver
S. Y, E. B, A. C, U. C, L. M, S. S, et al. Loss of CLN3 in microglia leads to impaired lipid metabolism and myelin turnover. biorxiv. 2024. doi:10.1101/2024.02.01.578018.
BibTeX
@unpublished{yasa2024Lossof, title = {Loss of CLN3 in microglia leads to impaired lipid metabolism and myelin turnover}, author = {Yasa, S. and Butz, E. and Colombo, A. and Chandrachud, U. and Montore, L. and Sheridan, S. and Mueller, S. A. and Lichtenthaler, S. F. and Tahirovic, S. and Cotman, S.}, journal = {biorxiv}, year = {2024}, doi = {10.1101/2024.02.01.578018}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings