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Mutant induced neurons and humanized mice enable identification of Niemann-Pick type C1 proteostatic therapies
Ruth D. Azaria, … , Mark L. Schultz, Andrew P. Lieberman
Ruth D. Azaria, … , Mark L. Schultz, Andrew P. Lieberman
Published August 29, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(20):e179525. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.179525.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Mutant induced neurons and humanized mice enable identification of Niemann-Pick type C1 proteostatic therapies

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Abstract

Therapeutics that rescue folding, trafficking, and function of disease-causing missense mutants are sought for a host of human diseases, but efforts to leverage model systems to test emerging strategies have met with limited success. Such is the case for Niemann-Pick type C1 disease, a lysosomal disorder characterized by impaired intracellular cholesterol trafficking, progressive neurodegeneration, and early death. NPC1, a multipass transmembrane glycoprotein, is synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum and traffics to late endosomes/lysosomes, but this process is often disrupted in disease. We sought to identify small molecules that promote folding and enable lysosomal localization and functional recovery of mutant NPC1. We leveraged a panel of isogenic human induced neurons expressing distinct NPC1 missense mutations. We used this panel to rescreen compounds that were reported previously to correct NPC1 folding and trafficking. We established mo56-hydroxycholesterol (mo56Hc) as a potent pharmacological chaperone for several NPC1 mutants. Furthermore, we generated mice expressing human I1061T NPC1, a common mutation in patients. We demonstrated that this model exhibited disease phenotypes and recapitulated the protein trafficking defects, lipid storage, and response to mo56Hc exhibited by human cells expressing I1061T NPC1. These tools established a paradigm for testing and validation of proteostatic therapeutics as an important step toward the development of disease-modifying therapies.

Authors

Ruth D. Azaria, Adele B. Correia, Kylie J. Schache, Manuela Zapata, Koralege C. Pathmasiri, Varshasnata Mohanty, Dharma T. Nannapaneni, Brandon L. Ashfeld, Paul Helquist, Olaf Wiest, Kenji Ohgane, Qingqing Li, Ross A. Fredenburg, Brian S.J. Blagg, Stephanie M. Cologna, Mark L. Schultz, Andrew P. Lieberman

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Figure 3

m56Hc increases thermal stability of NPC1 protein.

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m56Hc increases thermal stability of NPC1 protein.
Purified WT NPC1 prot...
Purified WT NPC1 protein was treated with 50 μM mo56Hc (blue lines and text), 50 μM 25Hc (red lines and text), or 50 μM mo56Hc + 50 μM 25Hc (purple lines and text) before thermal stability analysis was performed via monitoring of inherent tryptophan fluorescence using nano-differential scanning fluorimetry. First derivative analysis of the 330 nm emission wavelength is shown. The stabilization of NPC1 by mo56Hc is apparent in a shift in Tm as well as an increase in slope of the thermal transition.

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