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Acyl-CoA synthetase 6 is required for brain docosahexaenoic acid retention and neuroprotection during aging
Regina F. Fernandez, Andrea S. Pereyra, Victoria Diaz, Emily S. Wilson, Karen A. Litwa, Jonatan Martínez-Gardeazabal, Shelley N. Jackson, J. Thomas Brenna, Brian P. Hermann, Jeffrey B. Eells, Jessica M. Ellis
Regina F. Fernandez, Andrea S. Pereyra, Victoria Diaz, Emily S. Wilson, Karen A. Litwa, Jonatan Martínez-Gardeazabal, Shelley N. Jackson, J. Thomas Brenna, Brian P. Hermann, Jeffrey B. Eells, Jessica M. Ellis
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Research Article Inflammation Metabolism

Acyl-CoA synthetase 6 is required for brain docosahexaenoic acid retention and neuroprotection during aging

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Abstract

The omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) inversely relates to neurological impairments with aging; however, limited nondietary models manipulating brain DHA have hindered a direct linkage. We discovered that loss of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 6 in mice (Acsl6–/–) depletes brain membrane phospholipid DHA levels, independent of diet. Here, Acsl6–/– brains contained lower DHA compared with controls across the life span. The loss of DHA- and increased arachidonate-enriched phospholipids were visualized by MALDI imaging predominantly in neuron-rich regions where single-molecule RNA in situ hybridization localized Acsl6 to neurons. ACSL6 is also astrocytic; however, we found that astrocyte-specific ACSL6 depletion did not alter membrane DHA because astrocytes express a non–DHA-preferring ACSL6 variant. Across the life span, Acsl6–/– mice exhibited hyperlocomotion, impairments in working spatial memory, and increased cholesterol biosynthesis genes. Aging caused Acsl6–/– brains to decrease the expression of membrane, bioenergetic, ribosomal, and synaptic genes and increase the expression of immune response genes. With age, the Acsl6–/– cerebellum became inflamed and gliotic. Together, our findings suggest that ACSL6 promotes membrane DHA enrichment in neurons, but not in astrocytes, and is important for neuronal DHA levels across the life span. The loss of ACSL6 impacts motor function, memory, and age-related neuroinflammation, reflecting the importance of neuronal ACSL6-mediated lipid metabolism across the life span.

Authors

Regina F. Fernandez, Andrea S. Pereyra, Victoria Diaz, Emily S. Wilson, Karen A. Litwa, Jonatan Martínez-Gardeazabal, Shelley N. Jackson, J. Thomas Brenna, Brian P. Hermann, Jeffrey B. Eells, Jessica M. Ellis

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Figure 2

Acsl6 is expressed in neurons and mediates brain DHA enrichment.

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Acsl6 is expressed in neurons and mediates brain DHA enrichment.
(A) Ac...
(A) Acsl6 detection by smFISH in the hippocampus and CA3 and DG regions; blue, nuclei; green, Acsl6; white, maternally expressed gene 3 (Meg3, pseudo pan-neuronal nuclear marker); and purple, Vglut1. White box indicates area of inset (scale bars: hippocampus, 200 μm; CA3 and DG, 50 μm; inset, 5 μm). Lipid imaging by MALDI of predicted (B) DHA-containing PCs (PC 40:6 m/z = 872.5566, [M + K] + and PC 38:6 m/z = 844.5253 [M + K]+) and (C) AA-containing PCs (PC 36:4 m/z = 820.5253 [M + K] + and PC 38:4 m/z = 848.5566 [M+K]+) in the control, Acsl6G–/–, and Acsl6–/– hippocampus (scale bars: 500 μm).

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