PLoS Genetics (Sep 2023)

A monocarboxylate transporter rescues frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease models.

  • Dongwei Xu,
  • Alec Vincent,
  • Andrés González-Gutiérrez,
  • Benjamin Aleyakpo,
  • Sharifah Anoar,
  • Ashling Giblin,
  • Magda L Atilano,
  • Mirjam Adams,
  • Dunxin Shen,
  • Annora Thoeng,
  • Elli Tsintzas,
  • Marie Maeland,
  • Adrian M Isaacs,
  • Jimena Sierralta,
  • Teresa Niccoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010893
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 9
p. e1010893

Abstract

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Brains are highly metabolically active organs, consuming 20% of a person's energy at resting state. A decline in glucose metabolism is a common feature across a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Another common feature is the progressive accumulation of insoluble protein deposits, it's unclear if the two are linked. Glucose metabolism in the brain is highly coupled between neurons and glia, with glucose taken up by glia and metabolised to lactate, which is then shuttled via transporters to neurons, where it is converted back to pyruvate and fed into the TCA cycle for ATP production. Monocarboxylates are also involved in signalling, and play broad ranging roles in brain homeostasis and metabolic reprogramming. However, the role of monocarboxylates in dementia has not been tested. Here, we find that increasing pyruvate import in Drosophila neurons by over-expression of the transporter bumpel, leads to a rescue of lifespan and behavioural phenotypes in fly models of both frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease. The rescue is linked to a clearance of late stage autolysosomes, leading to degradation of toxic peptides associated with disease. We propose upregulation of pyruvate import into neurons as potentially a broad-scope therapeutic approach to increase neuronal autophagy, which could be beneficial for multiple dementias.