Deakin University
Browse

Oral treatment with Cu(II)(atsm) increases mutant SOD1 in vivo but protects motor neurons and improves the phenotype of a transgenic mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Download (2.92 MB)
Version 2 2024-06-06, 09:30
Version 1 2015-04-09, 13:11
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 09:30 authored by BR Roberts, NK Lim, EJ McAllum, PS Donnelly, DJ Hare, PA Doble, BJ Turner, KA Price, SC Lim, BM Paterson, JL Hickey, TW Rhoads, JR Williams, KM Kanninen, LW Hung, JR Liddell, A Grubman, JF Monty, RM Llanos, DR Kramer, Julian MercerJulian Mercer, AI Bush, CL Masters, JA Duce, QX Li, JS Beckman, KJ Barnham, AR White, PJ Crouch
Mutations in the metallo-protein Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in humans and an expression level-dependent phenotype in transgenic rodents. We show that oral treatment with the therapeutic agent diacetyl-bis(4-methylthiosemicarbazonato)copper(II) [Cu(II)(atsm)] increased the concentration of mutant SOD1 (SOD1G37R) in ALS model mice, but paradoxically improved locomotor function and survival of the mice. To determine why the mice with increased levels of mutant SOD1 had an improved phenotype, we analyzed tissues by mass spectrometry. These analyses revealed most SOD1 in the spinal cord tissue of the SOD1G37R mice was Cu deficient. Treating with Cu(II)(atsm) decreased the pool of Cu-deficient SOD1 and increased the pool of fully metallated (holo) SOD1. Tracking isotopically enriched (65)Cu(II)(atsm) confirmed the increase in holo-SOD1 involved transfer of Cu from Cu(II)(atsm) to SOD1, suggesting the improved locomotor function and survival of the Cu(II)(atsm)-treated SOD1G37R mice involved, at least in part, the ability of the compound to improve the Cu content of the mutant SOD1. This was supported by improved survival of SOD1G37R mice that expressed the human gene for the Cu uptake protein CTR1. Improving the metal content of mutant SOD1 in vivo with Cu(II)(atsm) did not decrease levels of misfolded SOD1. These outcomes indicate the metal content of SOD1 may be a greater determinant of the toxicity of the protein in mutant SOD1-associated forms of ALS than the mutations themselves. Improving the metal content of SOD1 therefore represents a valid therapeutic strategy for treating ALS caused by SOD1.

History

Journal

Journal of neuroscience

Volume

34

Pagination

8021-8031

Location

Washington, D.C.

Open access

  • Yes

eISSN

1529-2401

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2014, Society for Neuroscience

Issue

23

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience