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The metabolic signaling of the nucleoredoxin-like 2 gene supports brain function

Céline Jaillard, Farah Ouechtati, Emmanuelle Clérin, Géraldine Millet-Puel, Mariangela Corsi, Najate Aït-Ali, Frédéric Blond, Quentin Chevy, Lara Gales, Mélissa Farinelli, Deniz Dalkara, José‐Alain Sahel, Jean‐Charles Portais, Jean Christophe Poncer, Thierry Léveillard

2021Redox Biology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The nucleoredoxin gene NXNL2 encodes for two products through alternative splicing, rod-derived cone viability factor-2 (RdCVF2) that mediates neuronal survival and the thioredoxin-related protein (RdCVF2L), an enzyme that regulates the phosphorylation of TAU. To investigate the link between NXNL2 and tauopathies, we studied the Nxnl2 knockout mouse (Nxnl2−/−). We established the expression pattern of the Nxnl2 gene in the brain using a Nxnl2 reporter mouse line, and characterized the behavior of the Nxnl2−/− mouse at 2 months of age. Additionally, long term potentiation and metabolomic from hippocampal specimens were collected at 2 months of age. We studied TAU oligomerization, phosphorylation and aggregation in Nxnl2−/− brain at 18 months of age. Finally, newborn Nxnl2−/− mice were treated with adeno-associated viral vectors encoding for RdCVF2, RdCVF2L or both and measured the effect of this therapy on long-term potential, glucose metabolism and late-onset tauopathy. Nxnl2−/− mice at 2 months of age showed severe behavioral deficiency in fear, pain sensitivity, coordination, learning and memory. The Nxnl2−/− also showed deficits in long-term potentiation, demonstrating that the Nxnl2 gene is involved in regulating brain functions. Dual delivery of RdCVF2 and RdCVF2L in newborn Nxnl2−/− mice fully correct long-term potentiation through their synergistic action. The expression pattern of the Nxnl2 gene in the brain shows a predominant expression in circumventricular organs, such as the area postrema. Glucose metabolism of the hippocampus of Nxnl2−/− mice at 2 months of age was reduced, and was not corrected by gene therapy. At 18-month-old Nxnl2−/− mice showed brain stigmas of tauopathy, such as oligomerization, phosphorylation and aggregation of TAU. This late-onset tauopathy can be prevented, albeit with modest efficacy, by recombinant AAVs administrated to newborn mice. The Nxnl2−/− mice have memory dysfunction at 2-months that resembles mild-cognitive impairment and at 18-months exhibit tauopathy, resembling to the progression of Alzheimer's disease. We propose the Nxnl2−/− mouse is a model to study multistage aged related neurodegenerative diseases. The NXNL2 metabolic and redox signaling is a new area of therapeutic research in neurodegenerative diseases.

Topics & Concepts

TauopathyHippocampal formationBiologyLong-term potentiationReporter geneEndocrinologyGene expressionKnockout mouseHippocampusInternal medicineArea postremaNeuroscienceCell biologyGeneMedicineCentral nervous systemGeneticsNeurodegenerationReceptorDiseaseNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchAdipose Tissue and MetabolismMitochondrial Function and Pathology
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