The AKT2/SIRT5/TFEB pathway as a potential therapeutic target in atrophic AMD.

Journal: BioRxiv : The Preprint Server For Biology
Published:
Abstract

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of geriatric blindness, is a multi-factorial disease with retinal-pigmented epithelial (RPE) cell dysfunction as a central pathogenic driver. With RPE degeneration, lysosomal function is a core process that is disrupted. Transcription factors EB/E3 (TFEB/E3) tightly control lysosomal function; their disruption can cause aging disorders, such as AMD. Here, we show that induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC)-derived RPE cells with the complement factor H variant [ CFH (Y402H)] have increased AKT2, which impairs TFEB/TFE3 nuclear translocation and lysosomal function. Increased AKT2 can inhibit PGC1α, which downregulates SIRT5, an AKT2 binding partner. SIRT5 and AKT2 co-regulate each other, thereby modulating TFEB-dependent lysosomal function in the RPE. Failure of the AKT2/SIRT5/TFEB pathway in the RPE induced abnormalities in the autophagy-lysosome cellular axis by upregulating secretory autophagy, thereby releasing a plethora of factors that likely contribute to drusen formation, a hallmark of AMD. Finally, overexpressing AKT2 in RPE cells in mice led to an AMD-like phenotype. Thus, targeting the AKT2/SIRT5/TFEB pathway could be a potential therapy for atrophic AMD.

Authors
Sayan Ghosh, Ruchi Sharma, Sridhar Bammidi, Victoria Koontz, Mihir Nemani, Meysam Yazdankhah, Katarzyna Kedziora, Callen Wallace, Cheng Yu Wei, Jonathan Franks, Devika Bose, Dhivyaa Rajasundaram, Stacey Hose, José-alain Sahel, Rosa Puertollano, Toren Finkel, J Zigler, Yuri Sergeev, Simon Watkins, Eric Goetzman, Miguel Flores Bellver, Kai Kaarniranta, Akrit Sodhi, Kapil Bharti, James Handa, Debasish Sinha