Neuronal genetic rescue normalizes brain network dynamics in a lysosomal storage disorder despite persistent storage accumulation.
Publication/Presentation Date
7-6-2022
Abstract
Although neurologic symptoms occur in two-thirds of lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), for most we do not understand the mechanisms underlying brain dysfunction. A major unanswered question is if the pathogenic hallmark of LSDs, storage accumulation, induces functional defects directly or is a disease bystander. Also, for most LSDs we do not know the impact of loss of function in individual cell types. Understanding these critical questions are essential to therapy development. Here, we determine the impact of genetic rescue in distinct cell types on neural circuit dysfunction in CLN3 disease, the most common pediatric dementia and a paradigmatic neurodegenerative LSD. We restored Cln3 expression via AAV-mediated gene delivery and conditional genetic rescue in a CLN3 disease mouse model. Surprisingly, we found that low-level rescue of Cln3 expression in neurons alone normalized clinically relevant electrophysiologic markers of network dysfunction, despite the presence of substantial residual histopathology, in contrast to restoring expression in astrocytes. Thus, loss of CLN3 function in neurons, not storage accumulation, underlies neurologic dysfunction in CLN3 disease. This impliesies that storage clearance may be an inappropriate target for therapy development and an ineffectual biomarker.
Volume
30
Issue
7
First Page
2464
Last Page
2473
ISSN
1525-0024
Published In/Presented At
Ahrens-Nicklas, R. C., Tecedor, L., Hall, A. F., Kane, O., Chung, R. J., Lysenko, E., Marsh, E. D., Stein, C. S., & Davidson, B. L. (2022). Neuronal genetic rescue normalizes brain network dynamics in a lysosomal storage disorder despite persistent storage accumulation. Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy, 30(7), 2464–2473. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2022.03.025
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
35395398
Department(s)
Fellows and Residents
Document Type
Article