4.8 Editorial Material

Defective mitophagy in human Niemann-Pick Type C1 neurons is due to abnormal autophagy activation

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 8, Issue 7, Pages 1157-1158

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/auto.20668

Keywords

human stem cells; cholesterol; neurodegeneration; lysosomal storage disease; mitophagy

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Although traditionally regarded as a cellular adaptive process triggered by nutrient deprivation, autophagy in neurons appears to provide an important neuroprotective mechanism. Neurons in the brain are protected from starvation, and neuronal autophagy serves a critical role in the turnover of abnormal proteins and damaged organelles. As post-mitotic, highly polarized cells with active protein trafficking, neurons rely heavily on an efficient autophagic pathway. Using human embryonic stem cell-derived neurons engineered to mimic the cholesterol lysosomal storage disease Niemann Pick type C1 (NPC1), we have shown that excessive activation and impaired progression of the autophagic pathway conspire to cause abnormal mitochondrial clearance. Defective mitophagy is exceptionally severe in human NPC1 neurons, as compared with patient fibroblasts, and may explain the selective neuronal failure observed in NPC1 and related neurodegenerative disorders.

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