Rit2 silencing in dopamine neurons drives a progressive Parkinsonian phenotype [preprint]
Kearney, Patrick J ; Zhang, Yuanxi ; Tan, Yanglan ; Kahuno, Elizabeth ; Conklin, Tucker L ; Fagan, Rita R ; Pavchinskiy, Rebecca G ; Shafer, Scott A ; Yue, Zhenyu ; Melikian, Haley E
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Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease and arises from dopamine (DA) neuron death selectively in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). Rit2 is a reported PD risk allele, and recent single cell transcriptomic studies identified a major RIT2 cluster in PD DA neurons, potentially linking Rit2 expression anomalies to a PD patient cohort. However, it is still unknown whether Rit2 loss itself is causative for PD or PD-like symptoms. Here we report that conditional Rit2 silencing in mouse DA neurons drove a progressive motor dysfunction that was more rapid in males than females and was rescued at early stages by either inhibiting the DA transporter (DAT) or with L-DOPA treatment. Motor dysfunction was accompanied by decreases in DA release, striatal DA content, phenotypic DAergic markers, and a loss of DA neurons, with increased pSer129-alpha synuclein expression. These results provide the first evidence that Rit2 loss is causal for SNc cell death and a PD-like phenotype, and reveal key sex-specific differences in the response to Rit2 loss.
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Kearney PJ, Zhang Y, Tan Y, Kahuno E, Conklin TL, Fagan RR, Pavchinskiy RG, Shafer SA, Yue Z, Melikian HE. Rit2 silencing in dopamine neurons drives a progressive Parkinsonian phenotype. Res Sq [Preprint]. 2023 May 25:rs.3.rs-2944614. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-2944614/v1. Update in: NPJ Parkinsons Dis. 2024 Feb 23;10(1):41. doi: 10.1038/s41531-024-00648-8. PMID: 37293098; PMCID: PMC10246263.
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This article is a preprint. Preprints are preliminary reports of work that have not been certified by peer review.