Neurobiology of Disease (Jul 2011)

Knockdown of MLC1 in primary astrocytes causes cell vacuolation: A MLC disease cell model

  • Anna Duarri,
  • Miguel Lopez de Heredia,
  • Xavier Capdevila-Nortes,
  • Margreet C. Ridder,
  • Marisol Montolio,
  • Tania López-Hernández,
  • Ilja Boor,
  • Chun-Fu Lien,
  • Tracy Hagemann,
  • Albee Messing,
  • Dariusz C. Gorecki,
  • Gert C. Scheper,
  • Albert Martínez,
  • Virginia Nunes,
  • Marjo S. van der Knaap,
  • Raúl Estévez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 1
pp. 228 – 238

Abstract

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Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts (MLC) is a rare type of leukodystrophy, in the majority of cases caused by mutations in the MLC1 gene. MRI from MLC patients shows diffuse cerebral white matter signal abnormality and swelling, with evidence of increased water content. Histopathology in a MLC patient shows vacuolation of myelin, which causes the cerebral white matter swelling. MLC1 protein is expressed in astrocytic processes that are part of blood- and cerebrospinal fluid-brain barriers. We aimed to create an astrocyte cell model of MLC disease. The characterization of rat astrocyte cultures revealed MLC1 localization in cell–cell contacts, which contains other proteins described typically in tight and adherent junctions. MLC1 localization in these contacts was demonstrated to depend on the actin cytoskeleton; it was not altered when disrupting the microtubule or the GFAP networks. In human tissues, MLC1 and the protein Zonula Occludens 1 (ZO-1), which is linked to the actin cytoskeleton, co-localized by EM immunostaining and were specifically co-immunoprecipitated. To create an MLC cell model, knockdown of MLC1 in primary astrocytes was performed. Reduction of MLC1 expression resulted in the appearance of intracellular vacuoles. This vacuolation was reversed by the co-expression of human MLC1. Re-examination of a human brain biopsy from an MLC patient revealed that vacuoles were also consistently present in astrocytic processes. Thus, vacuolation of astrocytes is also a hallmark of MLC disease.

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