| Literature DB >> 33263002 |
Frances M Smith1, Daniel J Kosman1.
Abstract
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is a multi-faceted disease characterized by progressive sensory-motor loss, neurodegeneration, brain iron accumulation, and eventual death by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. FRDA follows loss of frataxin (FXN), a mitochondrial chaperone protein required for incorporation of iron into iron-sulfur cluster and heme precursors. After the discovery of the molecular basis of FRDA in 1996, over two decades of research have been dedicated to understanding the temporal manifestations of disease both at the whole body and molecular level. Early research indicated strong cellular iron dysregulation in both human and yeast models followed by onset of oxidative stress. Since then, the pathophysiology due to dysregulation of intracellular iron chaperoning has become central in FRDA relative to antioxidant defense and run-down in energy metabolism. At the same time, limited consideration has been given to changes in cytoskeletal organization, which was one of the first molecular defects noted. These alterations include both post-translational oxidative glutathionylation of actin monomers and differential DNA processing of a cytoskeletal regulator PIP5K1β. Currently unknown in respect to FRDA but well understood in the context of FXN-deficient cell physiology is the resulting impact on the cytoskeleton; this disassembly of actin filaments has a particularly profound effect on cell-cell junctions characteristic of barrier cells. With respect to a neurodegenerative disorder such as FRDA, this cytoskeletal and tight junction breakdown in the brain microvascular endothelial cells of the blood-brain barrier is likely a component of disease etiology. This review serves to outline a brief history of this research and hones in on pathway dysregulation downstream of iron-related pathology in FRDA related to actin dynamics. The review presented here was not written with the intent of being exhaustive, but to instead urge the reader to consider the essentiality of the cytoskeleton and appreciate the limited knowledge on FRDA-related cytoskeletal dysfunction as a result of oxidative stress. The review examines previous hypotheses of neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) in FRDA with a specific biochemical focus.Entities:
Keywords: Friedreich’s ataxia; Nrf2; PIP5K1β; cytoskeleton; frataxin; glutathione
Year: 2020 PMID: 33263002 PMCID: PMC7686857 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2020.569293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
FIGURE 1Mitochondrial iron co-factor biosynthetic pathways are reliant on FXN iron chaperone function. (A) Heme biosynthesis. The final step is ferrochelatase (FECH)-mediated Fe2+ insertion into protoporphyrin IX. FXN-Fe2+ serves as the iron source for this heme maturation process. (B) The mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster (ISC) biosynthetic pathway is depicted. The ISC scaffold includes NFS1, ISD11, and ISCU dimers. Delivery of the Fe2+ by FXN follows sulfur addition by cysteine desulferase (not shown). The final step of the formation before release of ISCU containing ISC centers for addition into an apo-enzyme. Protein structure provided through The Protein Data Bank (Berman et al., 2000; Dhe-Paganon et al., 2000).
Proteins and metabolites key to the pathology of FRDA.
| Name | Gene symbol | Function | FRDA relevance |
| Aconitase | ACO2 | Citrate-isocitrate conversion in TCA cycle (mitochondrial), modulates IRE-containing gene transcription (cytoplasmic) | ISC containing, decreased activity in FXN deficiency |
| Cysteamine/Cystamine | Provides cysteine in glutathione synthesis | Anti-oxidant, potential rescue of glutathione metabolism in FXN deficiency | |
| F-actin | ACTB | Cytoskeleton formation, anchorage of junction proteins, anchorage of organelles | Lack of polymerization and tropomyosin binding in FXN deficiency. Gives cells altered morphology |
| Frataxin | FXN | Iron incorporation into ISCs and heme centers | Decreased transcription and protein production in FRDA Inefficient ISC and heme biosynthesis |
| Glutathione Effectors: Glutaredoxin (Grx) Glutathione-S-Transferase (GST) Sulfiredoxin (Sfx) Thioredoxin (Trx) Peroxiredoxin (Prx) | GLRX GSTP/M/A/T SRXN1 TXN PRDX1/2/6 | GSSG → (2)GSH GSH + HSP → GSSP S-S → (2)SH S-S → (2)SH S-S → (2)SH | FXN-deficiency promotes increased glutathionylation of proteins. Cell GSH buffering capacity depressed due to pathologic oxidative stress. Actin glutathionylation disrupts protein-protein interactions in actin polymerization and anchorage of tight junction proteins |
| ISD11 | LYRM4 | ISC scaffolding protein, functional interaction with FXN | A lack of FXN prevents efficient ISC cluster formation at the step of iron insertion |
| Keap1 | KEAP1 | Tethers Nrf2 proteins to actin bundles, preventing ARE-containing gene transcription | Loss of Keap1 binding to actin filaments in FRDA prevents tethering of Nrf2, preventing its activity as a transcription factor |
| Nrf2 | NFE2L2 | Oxidative stress-activated transcription factor for ARE-containing genes | Decreased activation of downstream antioxidant and iron metabolism proteins with FXN deficiency |
| PIP5K1β | PIP5K1B | Actin stabilization protein | Less PIP5K1 β protein production in FRDA due to |
| Protoporphyrin IX | – | Final metal-free precursor of heme | Possible accumulation in absence of FXN Fe-delivery |
| ZO-1 | TJP1 | Scaffold protein of TJs which tethers peripheral junctional proteins to actin | Loss of junctional continuity at the cell periphery in models of mitochondrial stress and depressed oxidative phosphorylation |
FIGURE 2Stepwise demonstration of the Fenton reactions and subsequent pathological effects. Reactions depicted with dotted arrows represent reverse reactions mediated by cellular antioxidants. Production of superoxide radical anion (SORA) in the first reaction is exploited and secreted by immune cells for pathogenic control, indicated by the solid curved arrow. Pathological consequences include oxidation of susceptible iron atoms in [4Fe–4S]2+ clusters. Production of hydrogen peroxide in the second reaction is damaging to lipid bilayers, DNA, mitochondrial membrane potential, causes apoptotic cascades, damages ICS, and disrupts the actin cytoskeleton. Production of hydroxyl radical in the final reaction is similarly known to damage lipid bilayers, cause DNA strand breaks, and be reactive with all known biomolecules.
FIGURE 3A visual representation of ideas highlighted in this review concerning altered actin physiology in FRDA. The root of these alterations is the increase in GAA expansions in the first intron of FXN, shown in blue. Decreased transcriptional processing of PIP5K1β shown in yellow prevents phosphorylation of PI(4,5)P2, preventing normal actin polymerization (left, indirect effect of FRDA). Decreased production of FXN prevents normal ISC and heme biogenesis, permitting free cellular iron. Free radical production and oxidative stress follows, causing direct oxidation of actin filaments and glutathione addition, which prevents polymerization and binding to tropomyosin for stabilization (right, direct effect of FRDA). Nrf2 is shown to have inhibited nuclear translocation. TJP2 also flanks FXN as shown in pink, but is not known to be altered in FRDA at this time.