Isoginkgetin antagonizes ALS pathologies in its animal and patient iPSC models via PINK1-Parkin-dependent mitophagy

异银杏黄素通过PINK1-Parkin依赖性线粒体自噬拮抗其动物和患者iPSC模型中的ALS病理

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作者:Ang Li # ,Sen Huang # ,Shu-Qin Cao # ,Jinyi Lin ,Linping Zhao ,Feng Yu ,Miaodan Huang ,Lele Yang ,Jiaqi Xin ,Jing Wen ,Lingli Yan ,Ke Zhang ,Maoyuan Jiang ,Weidong Le ,Peng Li ,Yong U Liu ,Dajiang Qin ,Jiahong Lu ,Guang Lu ,Hanming Shen ,Xiaoli Yao ,Evandro F Fang ,Huanxing Su

Abstract

Damaged mitochondria initiate mitochondrial dysfunction-associated senescence, which is considered to be a critical cause for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Thus, mitophagic elimination of damaged mitochondria provides a promising strategy in ALS treatment. Here, through screening of a large natural compound library (n = 9555), we have identified isoginkgetin (ISO), a bioflavonoid from Ginkgo biloba, as a robust and specific mitophagy inducer. ISO enhances PINK1-Parkin-dependent mitophagy via stabilization of the PINK1/TOM complex. In a translational perspective, ISO antagonizes ALS pathology in C. elegans and mouse models; intriguingly, ISO improves mitochondrial function and antagonizes motor neuron pathologies in three ALS patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell systems (C9, SOD1, and TDP-43), highlighting a potential broad application to ALS patients of different genetic background. At the molecular level, ISO inhibits ALS pathologies in a PINK1-Parkin-dependent manner, as depletion or inhibition of PINK1 or Parkin blunts its benefits. These results support the hypothesis that mitochondrial dysfunction is a driver of ALS pathology and that defective mitophagy is a druggable therapeutic target for ALS. Keywords: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis; Drug Screening; Isoginkgetin; Mitophagy; PINK1-Parkin.

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