4.8 Article

Neuronal VCP loss of function recapitulates FTLD-TDP pathology

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109399

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Funding

  1. NIH [K24AR073317, R01AG031867, I01BX005204, R01AG044546, P01AG003991, P30AG066444, RF1AG053303, RF1AG058501, U01AG058922, R01AG057777, R01NS118146, R01NS102279]
  2. Archer Foundation

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Inactivating VCP and expressing disease-associated mutations in a mouse model revealed that loss of VCP-dependent functions is a mediator of FTLD-TDP, with unexpected biochemical similarity to progranulin deficiency.
The pathogenic mechanism by which dominant mutations in VCP cause multisystem proteinopathy (MSP), a rare neurodegenerative disease that presents as fronto-temporal lobar degeneration with TDP-43 inclusions (FTLD-TDP), remains unclear. To explore this, we inactivate VCP in murine postnatal forebrain neurons (VCP conditional knockout [cKO]). VCP cKO mice have cortical brain atrophy, neuronal loss, autophago-lysosomal dysfunction, and TDP-43 inclusions resembling FTLD-TDP pathology. Conditional expression of a single disease-associated mutation, VCP-R155C, in a VCP null background similarly recapitulates features of VCP inactivation and FTLD-TDP, suggesting that this MSP mutation is hypomorphic. Comparison of transcriptomic and proteomic datasets from genetically defined patients with FTLD-TDP reveal that progranulin deficiency and VCP insufficiency result in similar profiles. These data identify a loss of VCP-dependent functions as a mediator of FTLD-TDP and reveal an unexpected biochemical similarity with progranulin deficiency.

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