학술논문

Frataxin deficiency impairs mitochondrial biogenesis in cells, mice and humans
Document Type
article
Source
Human Molecular Genetics. 26(14)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Neurosciences
Genetics
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Neurodegenerative
Pediatric
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
5.2 Cellular and gene therapies
Neurological
Animals
Cells
Cultured
Disease Models
Animal
Fibroblasts
Friedreich Ataxia
Gene Expression
Genes
Mitochondrial
Humans
Iron-Binding Proteins
Mice
Mitochondria
Mitochondrial Proteins
Organelle Biogenesis
Frataxin
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Language
Abstract
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by inherited deficiency of the mitochondrial protein Frataxin (FXN), which has no approved therapy and is an area in which biomarkers are needed for clinical development. Here, we investigated the consequences of FXN deficiency in patient-derived FRDA fibroblast cell models, the FRDA mouse model KIKO, and in whole blood collected from patients with FRDA. We observed decreased mitochondrial copy number in all the three FRDA models tested: cells, mice and patient blood. In addition, we observed 40% residual mitochondrial gene expression in FRDA patient blood. These deficiencies of mitochondrial biogenesis in FRDA cells and patient blood are significantly correlated with FXN expression, consistent with the idea that the decreased mitochondrial biogenesis is a consequence of FXN deficiency. The observations appear relevant to the FRDA pathophysiological mechanism, as FXN-dependent deficiency in mitochondrial biogenesis and consequent mitochondrial bioenergetic defect could contribute to the neurodegenerative process. The observations may also have translational potential, as mitochondrial biogenesis could now be followed as a clinical biomarker of FRDA as a correlate of disease severity, progression, and therapeutic effect. Also, mitochondrial copy number in blood is objective, scalar and more investigator-independent than clinical-neurological patient rating scales. Thus, FXN deficiency causes mitochondrial deficiency in FRDA cells, the KIKO mouse model, and in whole blood of patients with FRDA, and this deficiency could potentially be used in clinical trial design.