TopicNeuroscience

mitochondrial ATP

Content Overview
2Total items
1Grant
1Seminar

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GrantNeuroscience

Validating Causality of Disputed Mitochondrial Variants in Inborn Errors of Metabolism

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Feb 28, 2031

PROJECT SUMMARY Primary mitochondrial disease (PMD) encompasses multi-systemic disorders caused by impaired mitochondrial function. PMDs arise from pathogenic variants in either nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial proteins, or in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genome. Clinical diagnosis is challenging due to phenotypic heterogeneity, underscoring the importance of genetic diagnosis. ACMG/AMP guidelines provide a well-established framework for interpreting nuclear DNA variants while diagnosing genetic diseases. Their application to mtDNA variants, however, remains challenging due to unique features of mtDNA: maternal inheritance, heteroplasmy, threshold effects, and effect of transfer or ribosomal RNA rather than coding variants. To address these challenges, the ClinGen Mitochondrial Disease Nuclear and Mitochondrial Variant Curation Expert Panel, co-chaired by the Multi-PIs of this study, developed widely adopted ACMG/AMP revised guidelines for mtDNA variant interpretation. Over the past five years, this global expert panel has curated more than 280 mtDNA variant. Because of the lack of functional data of individual mtDNA variants in the literature, 23 previously reported pathogenic (P) variants were classified as Variants of Uncertain Significance (VUS), hindering definitive PMD diagnoses and therapeutic development. This R01 project aims to resolve the pathogenicity of these 23 mtDNA VUS through functional validation, leveraging advanced mtDNA base editing and single-cell genomics in in vitro and in vivo models. In Aim 1, we will create human 143B cell line models for 20 VUS using cutting-edge mtDNA editing techniques, optimized for efficiency and minimal off-target effects. Single-cell genomics (mtscATAC-seq and scRNA-seq) will assess heteroplasmy and genomic changes, while functional assays will evaluate mitochondrial ATP production, oxidative phosphorylation, membrane potential, and redox stress. Aim 2 will develop zebrafish models for 17 conserved VUS, characterizing phenotypic and mitochondrial outcomes to corroborate in vitro findings and PMD patient phenotypes. This study will clarify longstanding uncertainties regarding the pathogenicity of these mtDNA VUSs which were nonetheless reported to be pathogenic with often strong genetic evidence but limited functional data. The study will also establish valuable cell and zebrafish models and provide mechanistic insights of PMDs. The resulting resources will be shared with the scientific community to accelerate research and therapeutic advancements for novel precision medicine approaches for PMDs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Metabolic spikes: from rogue electrons to Parkinson's

Chaitanya Chintaluri
Vogels Lab, IST Austria
Feb 23, 2022

Conventionally, neurons are thought to be cellular units that process synaptic inputs into synaptic spikes. However, it is well known that neurons can also spike spontaneously and display a rich repertoire of firing properties with no apparent functional relevance e.g. in in vitro cortical slice preparations. In this talk, I will propose a hypothesis according to which intrinsic excitability in neurons may be a survival mechanism to minimize toxic byproducts of the cell’s energy metabolism. In neurons, this toxicity can arise when mitochondrial ATP production stalls due to limited ADP. Under these conditions, electrons deviate from the electron transport chain to produce reactive oxygen species, disrupting many cellular processes and challenging cell survival. To mitigate this, neurons may engage in ADP-producing metabolic spikes. I will explore the validity of this hypothesis using computational models that illustrate the implications of synaptic and metabolic spiking, especially in the context of substantia nigra pars compacta dopaminergic neurons and their degeneration in Parkinson's disease.

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