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Mitochondrial and autophagic alterations in skin fibroblasts from Parkinson disease patients with Parkin mutations
Author(s) -
Ingrid GonzálezCasacuberta,
Diana-Luz Juárez-Flores,
Mario Ezquerra,
Raquel Fucho,
Marc CatalánGarcía,
Mariona GuitartMampel,
Ester Tobías,
Carmen GarcíaRuiz,
José C. Fernández–Checa,
Eduard Tolosa,
MaríaJosé Martí,
Josep M. Grau,
Rubén FernándezSantiago,
Francesc Cardellach,
Constanza Morén,
Glòria Garrabou
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.102014
Subject(s) - parkin , garcia , humanities , art , medicine , parkinson's disease , disease , pathology
PRKN encodes an E3-ubiquitin-ligase involved in multiple cell processes including mitochondrial homeostasis and autophagy. Previous studies reported alterations of mitochondrial function in fibroblasts from patients with PRKN mutation-associated Parkinson’s disease (PRKN-PD) but have been only conducted in glycolytic conditions, potentially masking mitochondrial alterations. Additionally, autophagy flux studies in this cell model are missing. We analyzed mitochondrial function and autophagy in PRKN-PD skin-fibroblasts (n=7) and controls (n=13) in standard (glucose) and mitochondrial-challenging (galactose) conditions. In glucose, PRKN-PD fibroblasts showed preserved mitochondrial bioenergetics with trends to abnormally enhanced mitochondrial respiration that, accompanied by decreased CI, may account for the increased oxidative stress. In galactose, PRKN-PD fibroblasts exhibited decreased basal/maximal respiration vs. controls and reduced mitochondrial CIV and oxidative stress compared to glucose, suggesting an inefficient mitochondrial oxidative capacity to meet an extra metabolic requirement. PRKN-PD fibroblasts presented decreased autophagic flux with reduction of autophagy substrate and autophagosome synthesis in both conditions. The alterations exhibited under neuron-like oxidative environment (galactose), may be relevant to the disease pathogenesis potentially explaining the increased susceptibility of dopaminergic neurons to undergo degeneration. Abnormal PRKN-PD phenotype supports the usefulness of fibroblasts to model disease and the view of PD as a systemic disease where molecular alterations are present in peripheral tissues.

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