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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

The physical biology of neurodegeneration in sporadic Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/Frontotemporal dementia

$16.78M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
Recipient Organization Columbia University Health Sciences
Country United States
Start Date Sep 01, 2021
End Date Aug 31, 2026
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 3
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10471351
Grant Description

On the sporadic Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis-Frontotemporal Dementia (sALS/FTD) clinical spectrum, the aggregation and accumulation of disease-associated proteins such as TDP-43 is a notable neuropathological hallmark, yet we know little about why this highly abnormal event might occur. Although disruptions in multiple

cellular processes have been implicated in ALS, 3 critical gaps in knowledge remain: 1) What triggers the aggregation of wildtype proteins in sporadic disease? Is protein aggregation sufficient to drive pathology? 2) What drives the cell-specific vulnerabilities and variable clinical manifestation from ALS to FTD? 3) How do

disease-associated alterations in protein homeostasis perturb communication in the tissue microenvironment? Given that more than 95% of ALS arises sporadically, and that the mechanisms of sporadic disease remain unknown, we will look beyond individual mutations, and establish a novel conceptual framework that examines

the cellular changes that occur during disease states. We posit that by focusing on why TDP-43 aggregation occurs, especially in sporadic ALS, we will gain insights into pathogenic mechanisms underlying this spectrum of disorders. Our central hypothesis is that there are physical changes at the cell and tissue

scale that initiate ALS/FTD. We propose that altered biophysical properties within cells (predominantly altered molecular crowding), which are linked to mechanical perturbations to the tissue microenvironment (stiffening, inflammation, edema causing osmotic stress), lead to age-dependent cellular dysfunction by

altering the dynamics of assembly, disassembly and transport of macromolecular protein machines. We will test this hypothesis in cellular models, animal models, and patient tissue by (1) using novel tools to probe the intracellular biophysical environment of cells; (2) integrating these findings using novel genomics technologies

applied to mouse models to study (i) how intracellular changes in crowding and extracellular changes in the tissue microenvironment may drive pathogenesis in vivo, and (ii) how such perturbations disrupt cell-cell communication in vulnerable regions of tissue; and (3) relating our findings to human disease by re-examining

these findings in the context of a clinically and neuropathologically deeply curated cohort of ALS/FTD patients. These studies will allow us to address the following questions: 1) Why does abnormal protein aggregation and accumulation occur in sporadic disease, and how might this contribute to disease pathogenesis; 2) Do

these alterations in protein homeostasis perturb intercellular communication in the tissue microenvironment; and 3) What drives the cell type vulnerability that makes ALS/FTD unique? The proposed work will accomplish the following: A) represent the first detailed survey of molecular crowding in neural cells; B) uncover whether a

causal link between intracellular crowding, protein aggregation, and neurodegeneration exists, C) establish whether the impacts of intracellular crowding show cell type specific signatures including changes in protein- protein interactions, and D) provide a new framework to explore therapeutic strategies for treating ALS/FTD.

All Grantees

Columbia University Health Sciences

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