Heavy metal neurotoxicants induce ALS-linked TDP-43 pathology
Toxicological Sciences, 2019•academic.oup.com
Heavy metals, such as lead, mercury, and selenium, have been epidemiologically linked
with a risk of ALS, but a molecular mechanism proving the connection has not been shown.
A screen of putative developmental neurotoxins demonstrated that heavy metals (lead,
mercury, and tin) trigger accumulation of TDP-43 into nuclear granules with concomitant loss
of diffuse nuclear TDP-43. Lead (Pb) and methyl mercury (MeHg) disrupt the homeostasis of
TDP-43 in neurons, resulting in increased levels of transcript and increased splicing activity …
with a risk of ALS, but a molecular mechanism proving the connection has not been shown.
A screen of putative developmental neurotoxins demonstrated that heavy metals (lead,
mercury, and tin) trigger accumulation of TDP-43 into nuclear granules with concomitant loss
of diffuse nuclear TDP-43. Lead (Pb) and methyl mercury (MeHg) disrupt the homeostasis of
TDP-43 in neurons, resulting in increased levels of transcript and increased splicing activity …
Abstract
Heavy metals, such as lead, mercury, and selenium, have been epidemiologically linked with a risk of ALS, but a molecular mechanism proving the connection has not been shown. A screen of putative developmental neurotoxins demonstrated that heavy metals (lead, mercury, and tin) trigger accumulation of TDP-43 into nuclear granules with concomitant loss of diffuse nuclear TDP-43. Lead (Pb) and methyl mercury (MeHg) disrupt the homeostasis of TDP-43 in neurons, resulting in increased levels of transcript and increased splicing activity of TDP-43. TDP-43 homeostasis is tightly regulated, and positively or negatively altering its splicing-suppressive activity has been shown to be deleterious to neurons. These changes are associated with the liquid-liquid phase separation of TDP-43 into nuclear bodies. We show that lead directly facilitates phase separation of TDP-43 in a dose-dependent manner in vitro, possibly explaining the means by which lead treatment results in neuronal nuclear granules. Metal toxicants also triggered the accumulation of insoluble TDP-43 in cultured cells and in the cortices of exposed mice. These results provide novel evidence of a direct mechanistic link between heavy metals, which are a commonly cited environmental risk of ALS, and molecular changes in TDP-43, the primary pathological protein accumulating in ALS.
Oxford University Press
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