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A calcium-dependent protease as a potential therapeutic target for Wolfram syndrome
Authors:Simin Lu  Kohsuke Kanekura  Takashi Hara  Jana Mahadevan  Larry D. Spears  Christine M. Oslowski  Rita Martinez  Mayu Yamazaki-Inoue  Masashi Toyoda  Amber Neilson  Patrick Blanner  Cris M. Brown  Clay F. Semenkovich  Bess A. Marshall  Tamara Hershey  Akihiro Umezawa  Peter A. Greer  Fumihiko Urano
Abstract:Wolfram syndrome is a genetic disorder characterized by diabetes and neurodegeneration and considered as an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) disease. Despite the underlying importance of ER dysfunction in Wolfram syndrome and the identification of two causative genes, Wolfram syndrome 1 (WFS1) and Wolfram syndrome 2 (WFS2), a molecular mechanism linking the ER to death of neurons and β cells has not been elucidated. Here we implicate calpain 2 in the mechanism of cell death in Wolfram syndrome. Calpain 2 is negatively regulated by WFS2, and elevated activation of calpain 2 by WFS2-knockdown correlates with cell death. Calpain activation is also induced by high cytosolic calcium mediated by the loss of function of WFS1. Calpain hyperactivation is observed in the WFS1 knockout mouse as well as in neural progenitor cells derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells of Wolfram syndrome patients. A small-scale small-molecule screen targeting ER calcium homeostasis reveals that dantrolene can prevent cell death in neural progenitor cells derived from Wolfram syndrome iPS cells. Our results demonstrate that calpain and the pathway leading its activation provides potential therapeutic targets for Wolfram syndrome and other ER diseases.The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) takes center stage for protein production, redox regulation, calcium homeostasis, and cell death (1, 2). It follows that genetic or acquired ER dysfunction can trigger a variety of common diseases, including neurodegenerative diseases, metabolic disorders, and inflammatory bowel disease (3, 4). Breakdown in ER function is also associated with genetic disorders such as Wolfram syndrome (58). It is challenging to determine the exact effects of ER dysfunction on the fate of affected cells in common diseases with polygenic and multifactorial etiologies. In contrast, we reasoned that it should be possible to define the role of ER dysfunction in mechanistically homogenous patient populations, especially in rare diseases with a monogenic basis, such as Wolfram syndrome (9).Wolfram syndrome (OMIM 222300) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus and bilateral optic atrophy (7). Insulin-dependent diabetes usually occurs as the initial manifestation during the first decade of life, whereas the diagnosis of Wolfram syndrome is invariably later, with onset of symptoms in the second and ensuing decades (7, 10, 11). Two causative genes for this genetic disorder have been identified and named Wolfram syndrome 1 (WFS1) and Wolfram syndrome 2 (WFS2) (12, 13). It has been shown that multiple mutations in the WFS1 gene, as well as a specific mutation in the WFS2 gene, lead to β cell death and neurodegeneration through ER and mitochondrial dysfunction (5, 6, 1416). WFS1 gene variants are also associated with a risk of type 2 diabetes (17). Moreover, a specific WFS1 variant can cause autosomal dominant diabetes (18), raising the possibility that this rare disorder is relevant to common molecular mechanisms altered in diabetes and other human chronic diseases in which ER dysfunction is involved.Despite the underlying importance of ER malfunction in Wolfram syndrome, and the identification of WFS1 and WFS2 genes, a molecular mechanism linking the ER to death of neurons and β cells has not been elucidated. Here we show that the calpain protease provides a mechanistic link between the ER and death of neurons and β cells in Wolfram syndrome.
Keywords:Wolfram syndrome   endoplasmic reticulum   diabetes   neurodegeneration   treatment
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