

Author: Palomo Gloria M. Cerrato Toñi Gargini Ricardo Diaz-Nido Javier
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISSN: 1460-2083
Source: Human Molecular Genetics, Vol.20, Iss.14, 2011-07, pp. : 2807-2822
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Abstract
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by mutations that produce a deficiency in frataxin. Despite the importance of neurodegeneration in FRDA, little is known about the consequences of frataxin deficiency in neuronal cells. Here we describe a neuronal cell model for FRDA based on the use of lentiviral vectors that carry minigenes encoding frataxin-specific shRNAs that silence the expression of this gene. These lentivectors can knockdown frataxin expression in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, which results in large-scale cell death in differentiated neuron-like cells but not in undifferentiated neuroblastoma cells. Frataxin-deficient neuron-like cells appear to die through apoptosis that is accompanied by up-regulation of p53, PUMA and Bax and activation of caspase-3. No significant autophagy is observed in frataxin-deficient neuron-like cells and the pharmacological activation of autophagy does not significantly increase neuronal cell death in response to the frataxin deficiency. Cell death triggered by frataxin knockdown can be impaired by interference with p53, caspase inhibitors and gene transfer of
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