| Literature DB >> 32231521 |
Anna Fassio1,2, Antonio Falace3, Alessandro Esposito1,4, Davide Aprile1,4, Renzo Guerrini3,5, Fabio Benfenati2,4.
Abstract
Autophagy is a highly conserved degradative process that conveys dysfunctional proteins, lipids, and organelles to lysosomes for degradation. The post-mitotic nature, complex and highly polarized morphology, and high degree of specialization of neurons make an efficient autophagy essential for their homeostasis and survival. Dysfunctional autophagy occurs in aging and neurodegenerative diseases, and autophagy at synaptic sites seems to play a crucial role in neurodegeneration. Moreover, a role of autophagy is emerging for neural development, synaptogenesis, and the establishment of a correct connectivity. Thus, it is not surprising that defective autophagy has been demonstrated in a spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders, often associated with early-onset epilepsy. Here, we discuss the multiple roles of autophagy in neurons and the recent experimental evidence linking neurodevelopmental disorders with epilepsy to genes coding for autophagic/lysosomal system-related proteins and envisage possible pathophysiological mechanisms ranging from synaptic dysfunction to neuronal death.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; epilepsy; lysosome; neuron development; synapse
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231521 PMCID: PMC7082311 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2020.00039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Overview of the mammalian autophagy pathway. In nutrient-rich conditions (fed state) mTOR phosphorylates TFEB preventing its nuclear translocation. In nutrient depletion or low-energy state, mTOR is inactive, and TFEB translocates to the nucleus leading to the transcription of many autophagy and lysosomal genes. mTOR inhibition together with AMPK activation positively regulate the ULK1 complex. Induction of this complex regulates the recruitment of the Beclin1/Ambta1/VSP34/VPS15 complex to the phagophore and, hence, the production of PI3P and downstream autophagy effectors Atg5/Atg12/Atg16L1 via the binding of WIPI proteins. This step is essential for the conversion of LC3-I to LC3-II through Atg7 and its conjugation to phagophore membrane. The membranes of these structures appear to have multiple sources, such as the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and trans-Golgi network, endosomal compartment, and mitochondria. LC3-II attracts components of the autophagy machinery and is required for elongation and closure of the phagophore membrane. Mature autophagosome finally fuses with the lysosome, forming the autolysosome, where autophagic cargo is degraded and then released back to the cytoplasm to be re-used by the cell. The proton gradient imposed by the lysosomal v-ATPase is essential for proteolysis as hydrolase activity strictly relies on acidic pH. Autophagy genes mutated in neurodevelopmental disorders with epilepsy are marked in red. AMPK, AMP-dependent protein kinase; mTORC1, mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1; TFEB, transcription factor EB; ULK, mammalian homologs of the Caenorhabditis elegans uncoordinated-51 kinase.
List autophagy/lysosomal genes involved in neurodevelopmental disorders with epilepsy.
| Disorder | Gene | Inheritance | Molecular defect | Key clinical features | Clinical references | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tuberous sclerosis-1 (OMIM # 191100) Tuberous sclerosis-2 (OMIM # # 613254) | AD | Autophagy induction | DD/ID Epilepsy Hamartomas in multiple organ systems Renal failure | Lipton and Sahin ( | ||
| TBCK encephaloneuronopathy (OMIM #616900) | AR | Autophagy induction | DD/ID Regression and cognitive decline Neuronopathy Epilepsy | Bhoj et al. ( | ||
| Cortical atrophy/dysplasia and epilepsy | AR | Autophagosome formation | DD/ID Cortical dysplasia Ataxia Hearing deficits Epilepsy | Gstrein et al. ( | ||
| Beta-propeller protein-associated neurodegeneration (OMIM #300894) | X-linked | Autophagosome elongation | DD/ID Encephalopathy with epilepsy Rett-like stereotypies Dystonia | Haack et al. ( | ||
| Vici syndrome (OMIM #242840) | AR | Autophagosome | #x02013;lysosome fusion | Hypopigmentation (skin, hair, retina) Agenesis of the corpus callosum Epilepsy Bilateral cataracts Cardiomyopathy Combined immunodeficiency Microcephaly DD Failure to thrive | Dionisi Vici et al. ( | |
| Spinocerebellar ataxia20 (OMIM #616354) | AR | Autophagosome | #x02013;lysosome fusion | DD/ID Ataxia Coarse facial features Epilepsy Sensorineural hearing loss Hepatosplenomegaly | Thomas et al. ( | |
| Developmental encephalopathy with epilepsy | AD | v-ATPase function | DD/ID Encephalopathy with epilepsy Quadriparesis | Van Damme et al. ( | ||
| X-linked ID, epilepsy and fulminant neurodegeneration | X-linked | v-ATPase function | Cortical atrophy DD/ID Dysmorphic features Early-onset neurodegeneration Epilepsy | Hirose et al. | ||
| Ohtahara syndrome with progressive course | AR | v-ATPase function | Profound DD Cortical atrophy Encephalopathy with epilepsy Severe epilepsy Failure to thrive Dysmorphic features Quadriparesis Sensorineural hearing loss Severe hypotonia | Esposito et al. ( |
Note. AD, autosomal dominant; AR, autosomal recessive; DD, developmental delay; ID, intellectual disability.