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Neuron-specific mitochondrial oxidative stress results in epilepsy, glucose dysregulation and a striking astrocyte response.


ABSTRACT: Mitochondrial superoxide (O2-) production is implicated in aging, neurodegenerative disease, and most recently epilepsy. Yet the specific contribution of neuronal O2- to these phenomena is unclear. Here, we selectively deleted superoxide dismutase-2 (SOD2) in neuronal basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor (NEX)-expressing cells restricting deletion to a subset of excitatory principle neurons primarily in the forebrain (cortex and hippocampus). This resulted in nSOD2 KO mice that lived into adulthood (2-3 months) with epilepsy, selective loss of neurons, metabolic rewiring and a marked mitohormetic gene response. Surprisingly, expression of an astrocytic gene, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) was significantly increased relative to WT. Further studies in rat primary neuron-glial cultures showed that increased mitochondrial O2-, specifically in neurons, was sufficient to upregulate GFAP. These results suggest that neuron-specific mitochondrial O2- is sufficient to drive a complex and catastrophic epileptic phenotype and highlights the ability of SOD2 to act in a cell-nonautonomous manner to influence an astrocytic response.

SUBMITTER: Fulton RE 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8939287 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Neuron-specific mitochondrial oxidative stress results in epilepsy, glucose dysregulation and a striking astrocyte response.

Fulton Ruth E RE   Pearson-Smith Jennifer N JN   Huynh Christopher Q CQ   Fabisiak Timothy T   Liang Li-Ping LP   Aivazidis Stefanos S   High Brigit A BA   Buscaglia Georgia G   Corrigan Timothy T   Valdez Robert R   Shimizu Takahiko T   Patel Manisha N MN  

Neurobiology of disease 20210808


Mitochondrial superoxide (O<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup>) production is implicated in aging, neurodegenerative disease, and most recently epilepsy. Yet the specific contribution of neuronal O<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> to these phenomena is unclear. Here, we selectively deleted superoxide dismutase-2 (SOD2) in neuronal basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor (NEX)-expressing cells restricting deletion to a subset of excitatory principle neurons primarily in the forebrain (cortex and hippocampus). Th  ...[more]

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