Abstract
Mutations in superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Disease pathogenesis is linked to destabilization, disorder and aggregation of the SOD1 protein. However, the non-genetic factors that promote disorder and the subsequent aggregation of SOD1 have not been studied. Mainly located to the reducing cytosol, mature SOD1 contains an oxidized disulfide bond that is important for its stability. Since O2 is required for formation of the bond, we reasoned that low O2 tension might be a risk factor for the pathological changes associated with ALS development. By combining biochemical approaches in an extensive range of genetically distinct patient-derived cell lines, we show that the disulfide bond is an Achilles heel of the SOD1 protein. Culture of patient-derived fibroblasts, astrocytes, and induced pluripotent stem cell-derived mixed motor neuron and astrocyte cultures (MNACs) under low O2 tensions caused reductive bond cleavage and increases in disordered SOD1. The effects were greatest in cells derived from patients carrying ALS-linked mutations in SOD1. However, significant increases also occurred in wild-type SOD1 in cultures derived from non-disease controls, and patients carrying mutations in other common ALS-linked genes. Compared to fibroblasts, MNACs showed far greater increases in SOD1 disorder and even aggregation of mutant SOD1s, in line with the vulnerability of the motor system to SOD1-mediated neurotoxicity. Our results show for the first time that O2 tension is a principal determinant of SOD1 stability in human patient-derived cells. Furthermore, we provide a mechanism by which non-genetic risk factors for ALS, such as aging and other conditions causing reduced vascular perfusion, could promote disease initiation and progression.
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Introduction
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterized by adult-onset progressive degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons (MN). Usually, the disease begins focally and then spreads contiguously, resulting in progressive paralysis and death from respiratory failure [20]. Mutations in superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) cause ALS [65], and are found in 1–9% of patients [3].
Human SOD1 is composed of two equal 153 amino acid-long subunits, each of which contains one copper and one zinc ion and a stabilizing C57–C146 disulfide bond required for dimerization. Of over 200 mutations identified in ALS patients, about 90% are missense and encode SOD1 variants that are destabilized to differing degrees. However, the proportion of disordered to natively folded protein varies widely between different mutations in patient cells [6, 47, 50, 51, 68, 71]. The other mutations encode mutants with structural alterations (insertions, fusions, internal deletions and C-terminal truncations). Most of the truncation mutations disrupt both the β-barrel core and the stabilizing intrasubunit C57–C146 disulfide bond of the protein. These mutants are intrinsically disordered, since they cannot fold correctly, and are rapidly degraded [13, 45, 50, 51, 68]. Based on these observations, it is likely that any common ALS-causing SOD1 species is disordered, lacks the C57–C146 disulfide bond, and is present at very low levels.
Although the involvement of wild-type SOD1 (SOD1WT) in ALS is contentious [9, 17, 27], there is an increasing body of evidence that has identified the presence of disordered and aggregated SOD1 in motor areas of the CNS in ALS patients that lack SOD1 mutations [15, 31, 32, 33, 39, 56, 60, 62]. Co-culture of motor neurons with primary astrocytes derived from sporadic ALS patients supports the involvement of SOD1WT in disease pathogenesis [41]. In addition, transgenic (Tg) mice that express human SOD1WT to a sufficient level develop both SOD1 aggregation and a fatal ALS-like disease [40]. These findings suggest that disordered SOD1WT could be more widely involved in ALS pathology than previously recognized.
SOD1 is an ancient enzyme and was secreted to the oxidizing extracellular space in early unicellular organisms, as well as in current α-bacteria [14, 58]. However, human SOD1 is localized primarily to the cytosol, which is strongly reducing. Hence, the C57–C146 bond could be an evolution-related Achilles heel of eukaryotic SOD1 due to vulnerability to reductive cleavage. The absence of the disulfide bond promotes disorder of the protein and its aggregation in vitro [21, 22, 35, 51, 53]. Moreover, soluble disordered and aggregated SOD1 in the CNS of human SOD1 Tg mice lacks the bond [10, 48, 77, 78]. Hence, C57–C146 appears to be a critical determinant of the role of SOD1 in ALS. However, factors that impact upon the formation and maintenance of the bond are not understood.
Age is the principal non-hereditary risk factor for ALS. It is associated with reduced perfusion in the CNS owing to vascular wall degeneration and neurovascular unit dysfunction [43]. Other suggested risk factors include smoking [37], CNS trauma, particularly to the motor cortex [66], embolisations of arteriovenous malformations [24, 54, 66, 72], transient ischemic attack, and stroke [72]. Strenuous physical activity has also been suggested to increase the risk for ALS [23], although this is contentious [38]. The underlying mechanisms are not understood, but a unifying characteristic could be reduced vascular perfusion leading to transient or chronic local CNS hypoxia.
The major pathway for C57–C146 disulfide formation is dependent on O2 and catalyzed by a copper chaperone for superoxide dismutase (CCS) [26, 30, 36]. Hence, we hypothesized that lowered O2 tension may impact negatively on SOD1 stability. To test this, we took advantage of an extensive collection of genetically defined cell lines derived from SOD1 ALS and non-SOD1 ALS patients, as well as from non-disease controls. As in vitro models of ALS, we used dermal fibroblasts, primary spinal cord-derived astrocytes, and induced pluripotent stem cell—(iPSC) derived mixed motor neuron and astrocyte cultures (MNACs). Analysis of lines carrying biochemically and structurally distinct SOD1 variants has enabled us to show, for the first time, that low O2 tension markedly increases the proportion of disordered, disulfide bond-reduced and aggregated SOD1 in a time and concentration-dependent manner and may be a risk factor for ALS development.
Materials and methods
Human materials
Samples from patients and non-disease controls (Supplementary Table 1), including blood samples for genotyping and skin biopsies for fibroblast culture, were collected with approval of the Regional Ethical Review Board in Umeå and in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki (WMA, 1964), following written informed consent.
Reagents and chemicals
Reagents and chemicals were obtained from Sigma or Thermo Fisher Scientific unless stated otherwise.
SOD1, FUS, TBK1 and C9orf72 genotyping
ALS patients were diagnosed according to EFNS guidelines [4]. Blood was screened to identify SOD1, C9orf72, TBK1 or FUS mutation carriers. Genotyping for SOD1, C9orf72 [51] and TBK1 [34] were performed as described. For FUS, only exons 2–6 and 11–15 were analyzed. All individuals tested negative for mutations in a panel of other ALS-linked genes (details available on request).
Derivation of human fibroblasts
Fibroblasts were generated from a 3 mm punch skin biopsy (upper arm) from 10 ALS patients with mutations in SOD1 (A4V, H46R, E78_R79insSI, N86S, D90A, G93A, L117V, D125Tfs*24 or G127Gfs*7 (G127X; two patients), one ALS patient with a mutation in FUS (Q23L), four ALS patients with mutations in TBK1 (A417X, M598V, I450Kfs*14 or p.690-713del), one ALS and one FTD patient with massive intronic GGGGCC repeat-expansions in C9orf72, and four non-disease control individuals (Supplementary Table 1). All patients were heterozygous for their corresponding mutations except for the homozygous SOD1D90A patient. All non-disease control subjects were relatives of ALS patients and tested negatively (wt/wt) for a panel of ALS-associated genes including SOD1, C9orf72, TBK1, FUS and UBQLN2 (details available on request). The establishment of lines followed standard procedures [51].
Generation and maintenance of iPSCs
Fibroblast lines were reprogrammed with either the mRNA Reprogramming Kit (Stemgent, Cambridge, MA, USA) [74] using a commercial service (Cellectis AB, Gothenburg, Sweden), or using episomal vectors [59] (Supplementary Table 1). After seeding at a density of 40,000 cells/cm2, iPSCs were cultured using the DEF-CS culture system (Takara Bio Europe, Gothenburg, Sweden). Media changes were performed every 24 h and cells were passaged using TrypLE every 3–4 days after reaching a density of 1.5–2 × 105 cells/cm2.
Generation of iPSC–MNACs
To differentiate MNACs, iPSCs at 90% confluence were switched into N2/B27 media, consisting of 1:1 DMEM/F12:Neurobasal, 1x Non Essential Amino Acids (NEAA; Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA), 2 mM l-glutamine, 1% (v/v) N2 supplement, 2% (v/v) B27 supplement and penicillin/streptomycin. Over the 14-day period of differentiation, N2/B27 media were supplemented with 1 μM all-trans retinoic acid (RA) and 1 μΜ smoothened agonist (SAG; Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA). For the first 6 days, cells were also subjected to dual SMAD inhibition with 10 μΜ SB431542 and 100 nM LDN (Stemgent, Lexington, MA, USA). On Day 7, dual SMAD inhibition was exchanged for 4 μΜ SU5402 (Stemgent, Lexington, MA, USA) and 5 μΜ DAPT (Selleck Chemicals, Houston, TX, USA) [52].
At Day 14, differentiated cells were dissociated with Accutase and plated onto poly-l-ornithine/laminin-coated 6-well plates (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) at a density of 100,000 cells/cm2, or 13 mm diameter coverslips (No. 1.5, VWR, Stockholm, Sweden) at 40,000 cells/cm2. MNAC cultures were maintained in MN culture media, consisting of Neurobasal, 1x NEAA, 2 mM l-glutamine, 1% (v/v) N2 supplement, 2% (v/v) B27 supplement, 0.4 mg/L ascorbic acid, 25 µM glutamate, 25 µM 2-mercaptoethanol, 1 μM RA, 20 µM Y-27632 (Abcam, Cambridge, UK) and penicillin/streptomycin. Cells were incubated in a humidified atmosphere at 37 °C supplemented with 5% (v/v) CO2. At days 11–13 days after plating, (days 24–26 after the onset of differentiation), MNACs were exposed to different O2 tensions prior to analysis.
Generation of patient-derived primary astrocytes
A piece (2 cm) of the ventral horn from the thoracic spinal cord of a SOD1A4V patient (Supplementary Table 1) was dissected at autopsy for cell isolation as described [41]. The tissue was diced and then dissociated using 2.5 U/ml papain and 0.5 U/ml Dispase (Stemcell Technology, Canada, Inc.) in 1xHBSS supplemented with 40 μg/ml DNAse at 37 °C for 45 min with mixing every 5 min. Cells were dissociated using a P1000 pipette tip and then mixed with KnockOut DMEM/F12 media containing 10% (v/v) foetal bovine serum (FBS), After filtering the cells through a 0.7 µm cell strainer, they were pelleted by centrifugation at 500g for 5 min. The cell pellet was resuspended in DMEM/F12 + 10% (v/v) FBS and mixed with an equal volume of Percoll (GE Healthcare, Chicago, Illinois). The mixture was centrifuged at 20,000g for 30 min at 4 °C and the flocculent layer above the red blood cell layer was collected, washed, pelleted and resuspended in primary cell media containing KnockOut DMEM/F12 + 10% (v/v) FBS supplemented with 20 ng/ml FGF-2, 20 ng/ml EGF, 20 ng/ml PDGF-AB (all from Peprotech, Rocky Hill, NJ), 2 mM GlutaMAX Supplement, 1x StemPro Neural Supplement and penicillin/streptomycin. The cells were cultured on CELLstart-coated plates and after 24 h the medium was replaced with serum-free primary cell media. Half of the medium was replaced every 2 days over 4–5 weeks until the cells reached 80% confluence. The cells were then passaged, expanded and plated either in coated 6-well plates (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA), for exposure to different O2 tensions, or on 13 mm coated coverslips (No. 1.5, VWR, Stockholm, Sweden) for immunocytochemistry.
Exposure to different oxygen tensions
Fibroblasts were plated at 8000–16,000 cells/cm2 in 6-well plates (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) and incubated in a humidified atmosphere at 37 °C with 5% (v/v) CO2. After reaching 75–85% confluence, the media were replaced prior to exposure to different O2 tensions. Differentiated MNACs were exposed to different O2 concentrations without a media change. For O2 tensions lower than 19%, cells were incubated in a sealed, humidified chamber (Biospherix, Lacona, NY, USA) gassed with gas mixtures (1–10% O2, 5% CO2, 94–85% N2) at 37 °C. The O2 concentration was maintained using a ProOx P110 oxygen controller (Biospherix, Lacona, NY, USA) supplied with N2 gas. For each experiment, cells were also cultured in parallel under humidified atmospheric O2 (19% O2, 5% CO2, 76% N2) in a standard tissue culture incubator.
Immunocytochemistry
Cells were fixed in 3.8% (w/v) formaldehyde for 10 min at room temperature, and blocked with 10% (v/v) FBS in PBS containing 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100 for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4 °C. The primary antibodies used were: anti-neuron-specific class III beta-tubulin (TUBB3, TUJ1, 1:7500, Covance Inc. Princeton, NJ, USA), microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2; 1:500, Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA), SMI32 (1:1000, Covance Inc. Princeton, NJ, USA), ISL1/2 (39.4D5, 1:5, developed by T.M. Jessell and S. Brenner-Morton was obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, created by the NICHD of the NIH and maintained at The University of Iowa, Department of Biology, Iowa City, IA 52242), S100β (1:200) and vimentin (1:1000 Progen, Heidelberg, Germany). The following day, coverslips were washed and incubated with Alexa-Fluor conjugated secondary antibodies (1:1000) for 1 h at room temperature, and nuclei were counterstained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; 0.3 µM). Cells were mounted in Aqua-Polymount (Polysciences, Inc., Warrington, PA, USA).
In vitro cell cytotoxicity assays
Dead cells that had lost plasma membrane integrity were quantified using the luminogenic substrate AAF-Glo (CytoTox-Glo Cell Viability Assay, Promega, Madison, WI, USA) as previously described [51]. Cell viability was calculated by subtracting the luminescence signal obtained before permeabilization with digitonin, from the luminescence signal obtained afterward, according to the manufacturer’s protocol.
Cellular ATP content was determined using the CellTiter-Glo Luminescent Cell Viability Assay (Promega, Madison, WI, USA).
Proteasome activity assay
A cell-based luminescent proteasome assay (Proteasome-Glo, Promega, Madison, WI, USA) was used to measure chymotrypsin-like proteasome activity as described [51]. The assay contains the luminogenic peptide substrate Suc-LLVY-aminoluciferin for determination of chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome.
Cell extracts
Cells were washed with 37 °C PBS containing 40 mM iodoacetamide (IAM), which blocks reduced cysteine residues via alkylation to prevent oxidation of reduced C57–C146 disulfide bonds during sample processing [78]. The cells were detached with trypsin and then washed with PBS containing 40 mM IAM and 0.5% (v/v) FBS. After centrifugation of the suspension at 500g for 5 min, the cell pellet was collected and snap frozen on dry ice and stored in a − 80 °C freezer.
Cell pellets were thawed rapidly in a water bath at 25 °C for 1 min and then lysed in ice-cold PBS containing Complete EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), 40 mM IAM and 0.5% (v/v) Nonidet P-40 (NP-40) using a Sonifier Cell Disrupter (Branson, Danbury, CT, USA). Lysates were centrifuged at 20,000g for 30 min at 4 °C and the supernatant was collected. The protein content of the cell lysate supernatant was determined using the BCA Protein Assay Kit. Disordered SOD1 was then analyzed immediately by misELISA (see below). Pellets were retained and snap frozen on dry ice and stored at − 80 °C for the subsequent analysis of SOD1 in detergent-insoluble aggregates (see below).
Analysis of disordered and total SOD1 by ELISA
Disordered SOD1 was quantified in cell extracts using a specific ELISA (misELISA), described previously [76, 77]. The capture antibody was raised in rabbits against a peptide corresponding to aa 24–39 of the human SOD1 sequence. This antibody reacts only with highly disordered SOD1 species and lacks affinity for the natively folded protein [11, 31, 33]. A goat anti-human SOD1 antibody was used as a detection antibody. It was raised against SOD1 that had been denatured by incubation with guanidinium chloride and EDTA, and reacts preferentially with the disordered/unfolded protein [76]. For calibration of the misELISA, brain and spinal cord tissue from a Tg mouse expressing human SOD1G127X was homogenized in 25 volumes 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0 in 0.15 M NaCl, containing Complete Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) and 40 mM IAM. After centrifugation at 20,000g at 4 °C, the supernatant was divided into aliquots that were stored at − 80 °C. One unit of disordered SOD1 is defined as the amount present in 1 g wet weight of the original human SOD1G127X standard.
The misELISA only detects disordered SOD1 species. There is no response to holoSOD1 or SOD1s that lack Cu and/or the C57–C146 disulfide bond, as long as the polypeptide is natively folded. Cell extracts are incubated for 1 h at 23 °C with the capture antibody. This temperature was selected as optimal because at the physiological 37 °C, some folded SOD1 species undergo continuous unfolding in highly diluted cell and tissue extracts, such as those analyzed here [77]. In addition, an increase in disorder at 37 °C compared to 23 °C is expected to show considerable variation between different SOD1s. For instance, the full-length SOD1A4V and SOD1G93A mutants show a significant degree of unfolding at 23 °C when Cu, Zn and the disulfide bond are removed (apo, disulfide-reduced SOD1). However, for SOD1WT and stable mutants, the apo, disulfide-reduced forms melt at temperatures exceeding 40 °C [64]. Hence, more stable variants would show greater proportional increases in disorder at 37 °C than their unstable counterparts. SOD1G127X and SOD1D125Tfs*24 C-terminal truncation mutants cannot fold natively and are intrinsically disordered. However, since they lack the C-terminal end, the truncation mutants are also expected to react less extensively with the detection antibody, which is raised against the entire denatured hSOD1 protein. Finally, mutations can also influence the conformation of immature SOD1 states, which could affect antibody reactivity [67, 70]. Hence, actual levels of disordered SOD1 at the physiological 37 °C are not mirrored equally for all SOD1 variants, and misELISA results are not directly comparable between cell lines expressing different SOD1s. However, for a given cell line expressing the same SOD1 variant, the effects of different O2 tensions on the levels of disordered SOD1 can be determined.
Following misELISA, cell extracts were snap frozen and subsequently analysed for total SOD1 with a sandwich ELISA based on rabbit capture and goat detection antibodies raised against native human SOD1 [76]. These antibodies bind to both native and disordered SOD1 with similar affinities.
Design and analysis of misELISA experiments
All sets of independent experiments were conducted with cultures of each cell line grown in triplicate wells (i.e. three technical replicates) for each O2 tension. This was repeated on at least three occasions (i.e. three independent experiments). To analyze differences in absolute misELISA values, data from all replicates for one condition (19% or low O2) were pooled for statistical analyses (see below) (fibroblasts/primary astrocytes, Fig. 3a/b; MNACs, Fig. 4b). To compensate for variations in cell density and other methodological variations in sample preparation and analysis, we also analyzed the ratio of disordered SOD1 at 19% versus low O2. In this case, the mean of absolute misELISA values at 19% O2 was used to normalize ELISA values within all samples belonging to the same set (fibroblasts/primary astrocytes, Fig. 3c/d; MNACs, Fig. 4c), prior to statistical analyses (see below).
Western blotting
Western blots were performed on Any kD or 18% (w/v) Criterion TGX precast gels (BioRad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) as previously described [51]. Primary antibodies (see below) were incubated overnight at 4 °C. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary antibodies (anti-mouse or anti-rabbit IgG; 1:10,000, Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) were incubated for 1 h at room temperature. ECL Select reagent (GE Healthcare Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ, USA) was used to detect the signal, which was recorded on a ChemiDoc Touch apparatus (BioRad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA) and analyzed using ImageLab software (BioRad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA).
The primary antibodies used for western blotting were; rabbit anti-human SOD1 antibodies raised against peptides corresponding to aa 24–39 (2.3 μg/ml), aa 57–72 (1.6 μg/ml), aa 144–153 (5.2 μg/ml) and aa 123–127 GQRWK (4.8 µg/ml, G127X-specific) [46], rabbit anti-CCS raised against peptides corresponding to aa 252–270 of the human CCS sequence (CCS, 0.9 μg/ml) [46], rabbit anti-CCS (1:1000 Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX, USA), rabbit anti-glutaredoxin-1 (1:250, Abcam, Cambridge, UK), mouse anti-β-actin (1:200,000; Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA) and rabbit anti-GAPDH (1:1000, Abcam, Cambridge, UK).
Human SOD1 standards
For quantification by total SOD1 ELISA, or full-length SOD1 by western blotting, a human hemolysate was used with known SOD1 content calibrated against pure human SOD1, the concentration of which had been determined by quantitative amino acid analysis [57]. For quantification by misELISA, or SOD1G127X by western blotting, an hSOD1G127X Tg mouse extract was used in which the SOD1G127X content had been determined by western blotting using the human SOD1-specific aa 24–39 antibody.
Quantification of disulfide-reduced and -oxidized SOD1
The proportions of disulfide-reduced and -oxidized SOD1 were determined using western blotting (see above) following polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-reducing conditions, i.e. by omitting reductant and adding 40 mM IAM to the sample buffer, as previously described [46, 77, 78].
Immunocapture
The same rabbit anti-human SOD1 antibody raised against aa 24–39 of SOD1 used in the misELISA was cross-linked to Dynabeads® M-270 Epoxy with the Dynabeads Antibody Coupling Kit. Beads were recovered with a magnet, washed with the supplied buffers to remove unbound antibody and equilibrated with PBS containing Complete EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), 40 mM IAM and 0.5% (v/v) NP-40. Antibody-coated beads were incubated with 20,000g cell lysate supernatants (see above) for 1 h at 23 °C. Beads were washed five times with PBS containing the Complete EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany), 40 mM IAM and 0.5% (v/v) NP-40 and samples were eluted by boiling in 1x Sample Buffer containing 40 mM IAM. A proportion of the input and non-bound fractions (1/40th), as well as the entire immunocaptured fractions, were analyzed using non-reduced western blotting to determine the relative proportions of reduced and oxidized SOD1.
Analysis of reduced and oxidized glutathione
GSH and GSSH were quantified by LC–MS [25]. After exposure of MNACs and fibroblasts to different O2 tensions (1–2–19% O2) for 24 h in 6-well plates, media were aspirated and 300 µL of ice-cold extraction mixture (0.25 µM glutathione (glycine-13C2,15N; GSH internal standard), 2.5% metaphosphoric acid, 1 mM EDTA and 0.1% formic acid) were added immediately to the cells. After scraping, the resulting cell suspensions were snap-frozen and stored at − 80 °C until analysis.
A tungsten bead was added to each tube and the frozen samples were homogenized immediately in a bead mill (Retsch MM400) at 30 oscillations/s for 1 min, followed by centrifugation at 22,000g for 20 min. The resulting supernatant (50 µL) was transferred to a LC–MS vial and 1 µL was injected and analyzed by LC–ESI–MSMS (1290 Infinity system from Agilent Technologies, with an Acquity UPLC HSS T3 column, thermostatted to 40 °C and coupled to an Agilent 6490 Triple quadrupole mass spectrometer). The analysis was performed essentially as described [18] by comparison to reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) solutions made in water (2.5 mM metaphosphoric acid, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% formic acid) at twelve different calibration concentrations (0.01–10 µM) and containing the GSH internal standard.
GSH and GSSG concentrations were normalized to the protein content of the corresponding 22,000g pellets after extraction. Pellets were resuspended by sonication/boiling in 1x Sample Buffer. Protein estimation was performed using the BCA Protein Assay Kit and bovine serum albumin standards boiled in 1x Sample Buffer.
Cycloheximide treatment
Fibroblasts were exposed to 19% O2 or 1% O2 as described above in the presence and absence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX; 50 µg/ml) for 24 h, prior to harvest and analysis by misELISA and total SOD1 ELISA.
Quantification of SOD1 in detergent-insoluble aggregates
Pellets were thawed on ice and washed twice by centrifugation at 20,000g for 30 min at 4 °C in cold PBS containing 0.5% (v/v) NP-40 to remove remaining detergent-soluble proteins. The material remaining in the pellet was used to determine the amount of detergent-insoluble/aggregated SOD1 by western blotting by comparison to a human SOD1 standard (see above). The amount of aggregated SOD1 in the detergent-insoluble fraction was expressed as a percentage of soluble SOD1 present in the corresponding cell extract, determined by total SOD1 ELISA.
Statistical analyses
Statistical analyses were performed using Prism version 6.00 (GraphPad, La Jolla, CA, USA). To test for statistical significance between two groups, Mann–Whitney U test was used. For ratio analysis where data was normalized to the mean of 19% O2, the degree of freedom (df) was adjusted with df − 1. For statistical significance testing between multiple groups, Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Dunn’s post hoc test was used. Alpha ≤ 0.05 was used as the cut-off for significance. All values are given as mean ± SD.
Results
Low oxygen tension promotes SOD1 disorder in patient-derived cells
Previously, we have used dermal fibroblasts from ALS patients as a cell culture model to study disordered SOD1 under physiological levels of SOD1 expression [51]. Cells cultured in vitro are typically maintained in humidified ambient air supplemented with 5% (v/v) CO2, resulting in an O2 tension of approximately 19%. However, under normal conditions, O2 tensions in the CNS are much lower, ranging between 0.2 and 5% [29, 55]. Moreover, various pathological conditions may lead to further reductions in local O2 tension. Therefore, we investigated the levels of disordered SOD1 in fibroblasts exposed to lowered O2 tensions for 24 h (Fig. 1a). We selected lines expressing a large number of different SOD1 variants with diverse molecular properties (Supplementary Table 1), to correlate these properties with potential increases in disordered SOD1, which we quantified with a specific ELISA (misELISA) [76].
Lines carrying the SOD1N86S and SOD1E78_R79insSI mutations showed distinct O2 concentration-dependent responses in disordered SOD1. Increase in disordered SOD1 was detected from 3% but was most significant at 1% O2 (Fig. 2a). However, no increases in disordered SOD1 were found in a line carrying the SOD1G127X mutation, which results in a C-terminally truncated protein that cannot fold properly due to a disrupted β-barrel and absence of the C57–C146 disulfide bond (Fig. 2a). Quantification of total SOD1 relative to total protein was performed to confirm that increases in disordered SOD1 were not due to increased SOD1 expression in response to low O2 tensions (Supplementary Fig. 1).
We next investigated the temporal response at 1% O2 and detected significant increases in disordered SOD1 at 4–8 h, which were sustained up to 24 h (Fig. 2b). To address whether the increase in disordered SOD1 was reversible, we examined different time points after returning cells from 24 h at 1% O2 to 19% O2. A rapid reversal was observed in the SOD1G93A line with a half-life for disordered SOD1 of ~ 30 min, returning to baseline after 4 h (Fig. 2c). Reversal of the increase in disordered SOD1WT in a control line was more rapid (Fig. 2c). No significant effects were seen in the SOD1G127X line (Fig. 2c). Hence, we concluded that the disordered SOD1 response was inversely proportional to O2 tension and was also time-dependent, reversible, and appeared to require the C57–C146 disulfide bond. Amongst the conditions tested in fibroblasts, the most significant response observed was at 1% O2 for 24 h.
We proceeded to investigate the response in disordered SOD1 under the same conditions in a panel of non-disease control and patient-derived fibroblast lines (Supplementary Table 1). We also generated primary astrocytes from the ventral spinal cord of a SOD1A4V ALS patient (Fig. 1a, Supplementary Fig. 2, and Supplementary Table 1). When comparing absolute levels of disordered SOD1 (Fig. 3a and b), or the ratio of disordered SOD1 at 1% versus 19% O2 (Fig. 3c and d), significant increases ranging from 1.6 to 3.5-fold were seen in all lines that carried full-length mutant SOD1s. Significant increases of lesser magnitude were also observed in most control lines, as well as in those from patients carrying ALS-linked C9orf72, FUS or TBK1 mutations, which only contain SOD1WT. Analysis of disordered SOD1 ratios highlighted significant increases in all lines, apart from those carrying C-terminal SOD1 truncation mutations and the absence of C146: SOD1G127X and SOD1D125Tfs*2. This supported the earlier conclusion that the response in disordered SOD1 to low O2 requires the C57–C146 disulfide bond.
An enhanced response of disordered SOD1 in motor neuron/astrocyte cultures
Since ALS preferentially targets the motor system, we reprogrammed a subset of the patient-derived fibroblast lines to iPSCs and differentiated these to MNACs (Fig. 1b and Supplementary Table 1). Recently we have found that levels of disordered SOD1 are enhanced in MNACs compared to their corresponding fibroblasts, iPSCs and iPSC-derived sensory neurons (unpublished data). After 10 days in culture post-differentiation (Day 25; Fig. 1b), MNACs contained ~ 5% neurons expressing tubulin beta-3 chain (TUBB3; Supplementary Fig. 3a and b) and ~ 95% astrocytes expressing astrocyte markers (unpublished data). A large proportion of neurons (78–84%) co-expressed the motor neuron markers ISL LIM homeobox 1/2 (ISL1/2) and non-phosphorylated neurofilament-H (SMI32), representing a limb innervating subtype that are highly susceptible to ALS [2].
We first titrated the dose–response in disordered SOD1 to O2 tension in MNACs from control, SOD1A4V and SOD1G93A lines. A significant increase in disordered SOD1 was detected at ≤ 4% and was maximal at 2% O2, which was enhanced in MNACs compared to fibroblasts in all three lines (Fig. 4a). Under the same conditions used for fibroblasts (1% O2 for 24 h), a significant degree of axonal fragmentation was observed (data not shown), indicative of neuronal stress. However, since axonal morphology (Supplementary Fig. 3b), cellular ATP levels (Supplementary Fig. 4a) and viability (Supplementary Fig. 4b) were not significantly affected by exposure to 2% O2 for 24 h, this was used to investigate the response in disordered SOD1 in MNACs.
Large increases in disordered SOD1, ranging up to tenfold, were observed in MNACs following exposure to 2% O2 for 24 h (Fig. 4b and c). The largest effects were found in several of the lines expressing full-length mutant SOD1s (E78_R79insSI, N86S, A4V, and G93A). However, in contrast to fibroblasts, a robust 3 to 4-fold increase was also seen in controls expressing SOD1WT and in MNACs that were heterozygous for SOD1G127X or SOD1D125Tfs*24 mutations and were present when comparing either absolute levels of disordered SOD1 (Fig. 4b) or the ratio (Fig. 4c) of disordered SOD1 within lines at 2% versus 19% O2. The increases in disordered SOD1 in MNACs carrying SOD1 C-terminal truncation mutations are likely to represent SOD1WT, since the level of mutant protein did not increase in the SOD1G127X line (Supplementary Fig. 5b).
Our previous study of patient-derived fibroblasts showed that disordered SOD1 is primarily degraded by the proteasome [51]. However, exposure to low O2 tension did not lead to a reduction in proteasome activity in MNAC extracts (Supplementary Fig. 6). Nor were there increases in SOD1G127X protein in either soluble (Supplementary Fig. 5) or detergent-insoluble (Supplementary Fig. 11b) fractions, which both increased greatly upon proteasome inhibition [51]. Inhibition of the proteasome also leads to copious aggregation of SOD1D125Tfs*24 in fibroblasts [51], whereas no changes were found here in response to low O2 tension (see below; Fig. 8 and Supplementary Fig. 11a). Hence, increases in disordered SOD1 at low O2 tensions could not be attributed to a reduction in proteasome activity.
Low oxygen tension promotes reductive cleavage of the disulfide bond
We have shown that reduction of the C57–C146 bond is a prerequisite for the formation of disordered SOD1 in the CNS [77, 78]. To examine the status of the disulfide bond in MNACs we determined the proportions of disulfide-reduced and oxidized SOD1 by non-reduced western blotting (Fig. 5a and b). Culture at 2% O2 for 24 h resulted in significant increases in disulfide-reduced SOD1, both in control lines expressing SOD1WT and those expressing mutant SOD1s. However, this was not the case for the SOD1H46R line, where a large proportion of the mutant protein is known to be disulfide-reduced under control conditions [75].
Disordered SOD1 in MNACs lacks the disulfide bond
To confirm that disordered SOD1 lacks the C57–C146 disulfide bond, we immunocaptured SOD1 from extracts of MNACs, which had been cultured at 19% or 2% O2, using the same antibody (SOD1 aa 24–39) and capture conditions (1 h at 23 °C) used in the misELISA. This antibody reacts with disordered SOD1, independent of the C57–C146 disulfide status [33]. Disulfide-reduced and -oxidized SOD1 were quantified by non-reduced western blotting (Fig. 5c). Input samples from control, SOD1G93A and SOD1A4V MNACs contained a majority of oxidized and a small proportion of reduced SOD1, which increased under low O2 conditions. Notably, an antibody specific for disordered SOD1 captured only disulfide-reduced SOD1. In control MNACs, disordered SOD1 was not detected at 19% O2 but increased at 2% O2 to ~ 1.4% of the disulfide-reduced SOD1 in the input sample. In SOD1G93A and SOD1A4V MNACs, disordered, disulfide-reduced SOD1 increased substantially (to 21% and 10% of the input samples at 2% O2, respectively). Hence, even in MNACs carrying mutant SOD1s, the majority of disulfide-reduced SOD1 retained an ordered structure. This agrees with observations in the spinal cord of SOD1 Tg mouse models, where approximately 5–10% of disulfide-reduced human SOD1 is disordered [77, 78].
Low oxygen tension does not alter other determinants of SOD1 redox status
The main mechanism for oxidation of the C57–C146 disulfide bond involves catalysis by CCS and is dependent on O2 [26, 30, 36]. The bond can be reduced by a mechanism involving reducing equivalents from GSH via glutaredoxin-1 [19]. To determine whether levels of CCS or glutaredoxin-1 were affected by low O2 tension and thus responsible for increased disordered SOD1, we analyzed their levels in MNACs grown at 19% versus 2% O2. However, no significant changes were detected in CCS or glutaredoxin-1 levels by western blotting (Fig. 6a and b and Supplementary Fig. 7). Next, we quantified GSH and GSSG, which form the principal redox couple in the cytosol. GSH and GSSG concentrations were higher in MNACs than in fibroblasts, but exposure to low O2 tension did not lead to significant changes in the levels of GSH (Fig. 6c) or GSSG (Fig. 6d). The concentrations of GSSG were remarkably high in MNACs, resulting in very low GSH/GSSG ratios, but these were not affected by O2 tension (Fig. 6e). Hence, low O2 tensions do not induce disordered, disulfide-reduced SOD1 via gross perturbation of the GSH/GSSG redox couple [69].
Maintenance of the disulfide bond and SOD1 structure is oxygen dependent
Increase in disordered SOD1 at low O2 tension could be due to impaired disulfide oxidation of newly synthesized SOD1, or to the reduction of the disulfide bond in the mature protein. To distinguish the relative contribution of these two possible mechanisms, we compared the response in disordered SOD1 in fibroblasts cultured in the absence or presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor CHX for 24 h. No significant effects were seen on the expression of SOD1 relative to total protein following CHX treatment (Supplementary Fig. 8). Inhibition of protein synthesis led to a small increase in the level of disordered SOD1WT in the control fibroblasts cultured at 19% (Fig. 7a). This suggests that CHX treatment had a slight effect on the capacity of the cells to handle disordered SOD1. However, it did not suppress the increase in disordered SOD1WT in control fibroblasts at 1% O2. CHX also resulted in a striking reduction in disordered SOD1 in the SOD1G127X line at both O2 tensions (Fig. 7b). This confirmed that the inhibition of protein synthesis was efficient. It also showed that CHX treatment did not significantly affect the degradation of the disordered mutant protein. In the SOD1G93A line, CHX treatment resulted in a reduction in disordered SOD1 at both O2 tensions (Fig. 7c). Hence, a proportion of disordered SOD1 resulted from a lack of disulfide oxidation in newly synthesized SOD1G93A. However, the response in disordered SOD1 was still greatly enhanced at 1% compared to 19% O2 when protein synthesis was inhibited. Thus, O2 is also required for maintenance of the disulfide bond and structure of the existing pool of mature SOD1.
Low oxygen tension promotes SOD1 aggregation
Since disulfide reduction and disorder promote SOD1 aggregation [21, 35, 53], we quantified the amount of SOD1 in detergent-resistant aggregates by western blotting. To identify the optimal antibody for this purpose, we compared antibodies to epitopes in the N-terminus (aa 24–39), the central region (aa 57–72) and the C-terminus (aa 144–153). A large number of apparently non-specific cross-reacting bands of unknown identities were evident (Supplementary Fig. 9). Since these bands differed between antibodies, we only quantified full-length SOD1 co-migrating with the SOD1 standard used for quantification. All three antibodies detected this band similarly. However, we used the aa 57–72 antibody because it was the most sensitive. For SOD1G127X quantification, we used the aa 123–127 GQRWK antibody, which is specific for this mutant.
Low levels of aggregation were found in fibroblasts, which did not increase significantly in response to low O2 (Fig. 8). In contrast, we found that low O2 tension induced marked increases in aggregation in MNACs carrying full-length mutant SOD1s (E78_R79insSI, N86S, G93A and A4V), but not in SOD1WT control lines or SOD1L117V, which has SOD1WT-like stability [71]. The SOD1H46R mutation disrupts copper binding catalyzed via CCS and impairs formation of the disulfide bond [75]. In agreement, the high level of aggregation present at 19% O2 in the SOD1H46R line did not change at 2% O2. Neither of the lines expressing the C-terminally truncated mutants that lack the disulfide bond (SOD1G127X and SOD1D125Tfs*24), showed increased aggregation. Hence, increased aggregation correlated closely with increased disorder in MNACs expressing full-length mutant SOD1s.
Discussion
By comparing the responses of a large panel of patient-derived cell lines carrying genetically and biochemically distinct SOD1 variants, we have found that low O2 tension leads to remarkably large increases in SOD1 C57–C146 disulfide bond reduction and disorder. In addition to being required for bond formation, we have identified that O2 is also critical for its maintenance. Furthermore, low O2 tension resulted in enhanced mutant SOD1 aggregation in MNACs but not in fibroblasts. This supports the idea that in human patient-derived models, as well as in Tg mice, the C57–C146 disulfide bond is an ALS-related Achilles heel of SOD1 in the reducing environment of the cytosol.
The O2 tensions found to enhance disordered SOD1 are within the range considered to be normoxic in human and animal tissues. However, the range of O2 tensions present within cultured cells is likely to be lower. This is due to both the rate of O2 diffusion through the culture medium and the rate of O2 consumption by cellular respiration, which depends on both cellular mass and the rate of oxidative metabolism [61]. Because these variables are difficult to control for between different cell lines, we chose to compare replicate samples cultured at different O2 tensions. The cells, which had been propagated and adapted to growth at 19% O2, were tested within a range that was found not to cause overt toxicity. A study in young resting awake mice found that O2 tensions in the CNS vary between 0.2 and 5% [55]. Even lower levels were recorded under normal conditions, e.g. in periarteriolar areas. Considering this great variation found in young mice, it is reasonable to assume that localized hypoxia could occur transiently, or more chronically, in middle-aged or elderly humans even in the absence of overt disease.
In SOD1 ALS mouse models, the average lifespan of homozygous Tg mice is approximately half that of hemizygous animals [44, 45]. In human ALS there is also a dose-dependence on mutant SOD1; doubling of the load of mutant SOD1 in individuals homozygous for SOD1 mutations L84F, N86S or L126S results in earlier onset and more rapid progression than in the heterozygous state [1, 16, 42, 49]. Furthermore, the D90A mutant protein, which has wild-type-like stability, typically only causes ALS in homozygous individuals [5]. Therefore, if our results showing large increases in disordered SOD1 in MNACs in response to low O2 tensions translate to the human CNS, this could likely contribute to the initiation and progression of ALS.
Recent findings in vivo suggest that prion-like growth and spread of SOD1 aggregation could be the primary disease mechanism of SOD1-induced ALS [7, 8, 12, 28]. Disordered SOD1 species are critical substrates for both the nucleation and growth of aggregates [21, 22, 35, 51, 53]. Typically, in animal or cell models of ALS, SOD1 overexpression is required for substantial aggregation to occur [63]. Our results show that in patient-derived MNACs that do not overexpress SOD1, even a short (24 h) exposure to low O2 tension can induce large increases in mutant SOD1 aggregation. This suggests that in patients SOD1 aggregation would have a greater probability of initiation in areas of the CNS with sustained low O2 tension.
As to the impact of low O2 tension on animal models, van den Bosch et al. [73] found no effect on the lifespan of hSOD1G93A Gur Tg mice exposed to 10% O2 at early or late symptomatic stages [73]. However, even when housed in normoxic conditions (21% O2), a significant proportion of mutant SOD1 in the spinal cord of hSOD1G93A mice is disulfide-reduced due to the extreme level of overexpression in this line [46]. Moreover, exponential aggregation of hSOD1G93A begins even before birth and has advanced considerably by the stages that mice were exposed to low O2 in the van den Bosch study [11]. Hence, it is unlikely that the effects that we have found in human patient-derived models in this study would be detectable in the hSOD1G93A Tg model.
Significant increases in disulfide-reduced and disordered SOD1 were also seen in cells from healthy control individuals and cells derived from patients carrying ALS-linked mutations in other genes. Although we only detected a significant increase in the aggregation of mutant and not SOD1WT over this short period, this could be important given the mounting evidence for the involvement of SOD1WT in ALS.
In summary, we show that O2 tension is a principal determinant of SOD1 disorder and aggregation. Our findings suggest that CNS areas with low O2 tension could act as foci for the initiation or progression of ALS. This mechanism might contribute to the enhanced risk for the disease associated with aging, as well as other factors that impair vascular perfusion.
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Acknowledgements
We thank the many individuals that generously provided patient or control samples. We thank Anna Wuolikainen for expert statistical advice and Agneta Öberg, Eva Jonsson, Eva Bern, Helena Alstermark, Matthew Marklund and Chloe Williams for skillful technical assistance. Swedish Metabolomics Centre, Umeå, Sweden (www.swedishmetabolomicscentre.se) is acknowledged for the measurement of GSH/GSSG by LC–MS.
Funding
This work was supported by funding from the Swedish Research Council (VRMH 2015-02804), the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (2012.0091), the Bertil Hållsten Foundation, the Torsten Söderberg Foundation, the Swedish Brain Foundation (Hjärnfonden FO2015-0234), the Ulla-Carin Lindquist Foundation, NEURO Foundation, the Stratneuro Initiative, Västerbotten County Council, the Research Foundation for Clinical Neuroscience, Umeå University and the Kempe Foundations. MS was supported by the Else Kröner Fresenius Stiftung.
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Keskin, I., Forsgren, E., Lehmann, M. et al. The molecular pathogenesis of superoxide dismutase 1-linked ALS is promoted by low oxygen tension. Acta Neuropathol 138, 85–101 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-019-01986-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-019-01986-1