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Phagocytosis-driven neurodegeneration through opposing roles of an ABC transporter in neurons and phagocytes

Xinchen Chen, Bei Wang, Ankita Sarkar, Zixian Huang, Nicolas Vergara Ruiz, Ann T Yeung, Rachael Chen, Chun Han

2025Science Advances13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lipid homeostasis is critical to neuronal survival. ATP-binding cassette A (ABCA) proteins are lipid transporters associated with neurodegenerative diseases. How ABCA transporters regulate lipid homeostasis in neurodegeneration is an outstanding question. Here we report that the Drosophila ABCA protein engulfment ABC transporter in the ovary (Eato) regulates phagocytosis-dependent neurodegeneration by playing opposing roles in neurons and phagocytes: In neurons, Eato prevents dendrites and axons from being attacked by neighboring phagocytes; in phagocytes, Eato sensitizes the cell for detecting neurons as engulfment targets. Thus, Eato deficiency in neurons alone causes phagocytosis-dependent neurite degeneration, but additional Eato loss from phagocytes suppresses the neurite degeneration. Mechanistically, Eato functions by removing the eat-me signal phosphatidylserine from the cell surface in both neurons and phagocytes. Multiple human and worm ABCA homologs can rescue Eato loss in phagocytes but not in neurons, suggesting both conserved and cell type–specific activities of ABCA proteins. These results imply possible mechanisms of neuron-phagocyte interactions in neurodegenerative diseases.

Topics & Concepts

NeurodegenerationPhagocytePhagocytosisCell biologyBiologyNeuritePhosphatidylserineNeuroscienceBiochemistryMembranePathologyDiseasePhospholipidIn vitroMedicineCholesterol and Lipid MetabolismComplement system in diseasesRNA Interference and Gene Delivery