A mutation in the PRKAR1B gene drives pathological mechanisms of neurodegeneration across species

Protein kinase A (PKA) neuronal function is controlled by the interaction of a regulatory (R) subunit dimer with two catalytic subunits. Recently, the L50R variant in the gene encoding the RIβ subunit was identified in individuals with a novel neurodegenerative disease. However, the mechanisms drivi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain (London, England : 1878) England : 1878), 2024-11, Vol.147 (11), p.3890-3905
Hauptverfasser: Benjamin-Zukerman, Tal, Shimon, Gilat, Gaine, Marie E, Dakwar, Anwar, Peled, Netta, Aboraya, Mohammad, Masri-Ismail, Ashar, Safadi-Safa, Rania, Solomon, Meir, Lev-Ram, Varda, Rissman, Robert A, Mayrhofer, Johanna E, Raffeiner, Andrea, Mol, Merel O, Argue, Benney M R, McCool, Shaylah, Doan, Binh, van Swieten, John, Stefan, Eduard, Abel, Ted, Ilouz, Ronit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Protein kinase A (PKA) neuronal function is controlled by the interaction of a regulatory (R) subunit dimer with two catalytic subunits. Recently, the L50R variant in the gene encoding the RIβ subunit was identified in individuals with a novel neurodegenerative disease. However, the mechanisms driving the disease phenotype remained unknown. In this study, we generated a mouse model carrying the RIβ-L50R mutation to replicate the human disease phenotype and study its progression with age. We examined post-mortem brains of affected individuals as well as live cell cultures. Employing biochemical assays, immunohistochemistry and behavioural assessments, we investigated the impact of the mutation on PKA complex assembly, protein aggregation and neuronal degeneration. We reveal that RIβ is an aggregation-prone protein that progressively accumulates in wildtype and Alzheimer's mouse models with age, while aggregation is accelerated in the RIβ-L50R mouse model. We define RIβ-L50R as a causal mutation driving an age-dependent behavioural and disease phenotype in human and mouse models. Mechanistically, this mutation disrupts RIβ dimerization, leading to aggregation of its monomers. Intriguingly, interaction with the catalytic subunit protects the RIβ-L50R from self-aggregating, in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, cAMP signaling induces RIβ-L50R aggregation. The pathophysiological mechanism elucidated here for a newly recognized neurodegenerative disease, in which protein aggregation is the result of disrupted homodimerization, sheds light on a remarkably under-appreciated but potentially common mechanism across several neurodegenerative diseases.
ISSN:0006-8950
1460-2156
1460-2156
DOI:10.1093/brain/awae154