Abstract
In a previous retrospective study using postmortem human brain tissues, we demonstrated that loss of Cholinergic Receptor Muscarinic 1 (CHRM1) in the temporal cortex of a subset of Alzheimer's patients was associated with poor survival, whereas similar loss in the hippocampus showed no such association. Mitochondrial dysfunction underlies Alzheimer's pathogenesis. Therefore, to investigate the mechanistic basis of our findings, we evaluated cortical mitochondrial phenotypes in Chrm1 knockout (Chrm1) mice. Cortical Chrm1 loss resulted in reduced respiration, reduced supramolecular assembly of respiratory protein complexes, and caused mitochondrial ultrastructural abnormalities. These mouse-based findings mechanistically linked cortical CHRM1 loss with poor survival of Alzheimer's patients. However, evaluation of the effect of Chrm1 loss on mouse hippocampal mitochondrial characteristics is necessary to fully understand our retrospective human tissue-based observations. This is the objective of this study. Enriched hippocampal and cortical mitochondrial fractions (EHMFs/ECMFs, respectively) derived from wild-type and Chrm1 mice were used to measure respiration by quantifying real-time oxygen consumption, supramolecular assembly of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS)-associated proteins by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, post-translational modifications (PTMs) by isoelectric focusing (IEF), and mitochondrial ultrastructure by electron microscopy. In contrast to our previous observations in Chrm1 ECMFs, EHMFs of Chrm1 mice significantly increased respiration with a concomitant increase in the supramolecular assembly of OXPHOS-associated proteins, specifically Atp5a and Uqcrc2, with no mitochondrial ultrastructural alterations. IEF of ECMFs and EHMFs from Chrm1 mice showed a decrease and an increase, respectively in a negatively charged (pH∼3) fraction of Atp5a relative to the wild-type mice, with a corresponding decrease or increase in the supramolecular assembly of Atp5a and respiration indicating a tissue-specific signaling effect. Our findings indicate that loss of Chrm1 in the cortex causes structural, and physiological alterations to mitochondria that compromise neuronal function, whereas Chrm1 loss in the hippocampus may benefit neuronal function by enhancing mitochondrial function. This brain region-specific differential effect of Chrm1 deletion on mitochondrial function supports our human brain region-based findings and Chrm1 mouse behavioral phenotypes. Furthermore, our study indicates that Chrm1-mediated brain region-specific differential PTMs of Atp5a may alter complex-V supramolecular assembly which in turn regulates mitochondrial structure-function.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 1179252 |
| Journal | Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology |
| Volume | 11 |
| State | Published - May 24 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Copyright © 2023 Sabbir, Swanson, Speth and Albensi.Funding
We sincerely thank Alzo Biosciences Inc. for funding support to Dr. Sabbir, St Boniface Hospital Research for additional infrastructure support; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. for providing numerous mouse monoclonal antibodies to Dr. Sabbir; special thanks to Andrew Pobre, Medical Laboratory Technologist, Diagnostic Services Manitoba (DSM), Winnipeg, Canada for electron microscopic sample preparation; Laura Curtis, Research Specialist, for allowing access to DSM facility; Dr. Jurgen Wess, NIH, for gifting of the Chrm1 knockout mouse line; and Dr. Paul Fernyhough for some reagents, equipment, and laboratory space support. Author MGS is a co-Founder of the company Alzo Biosciences Inc. Author MS was was employed by the company Alzo Biosciences Inc. The authors declare that the study received funding from Alzo Biosciences Inc. This study received partial funding from Alzo Biosciences Inc. San Diego, USA. The funder was not involved in the study design, collection, analysis, interpretation of data, the writing of this article, or the decision to submit it for publication. Partial reagent support was provided through Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant number MOP-130282 to Dr. Paul Fernyhough, University of Manitoba, Canada. Publication fees were provided by the NSU Cardiovascular Neuroscience Fund and College of Pharmacy research funds. All authors declare no other competing interests. This study received partial funding from Alzo Biosciences Inc. San Diego, USA. The funder was not involved in the study design, collection, analysis, interpretation of data, the writing of this article, or the decision to submit it for publication. Partial reagent support was provided through Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant number MOP-130282 to Dr. Paul Fernyhough, University of Manitoba, Canada. Publication fees were provided by the NSU Cardiovascular Neuroscience Fund and College of Pharmacy research funds. All authors declare no other competing interests.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| Alzo Biosciences Inc. | |
| Laura Curtis | |
| NSU Cardiovascular Neuroscience Fund | |
| Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. | |
| National Institutes of Health | |
| Canadian Institutes of Health Research | MOP-130282 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Developmental Biology
- Cell Biology
Keywords
- ATP syntase
- cerebral cortex
- hippocampus
- mitochondria
- mitochondrial ultrastructure
- muscarinic acetylcholine type 1 receptor CHRM1
- respiration
- respiratory complex assembly
Disciplines
- Medicine and Health Sciences
- Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Developmental Biology
- Cell Biology
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