The role of mitochondrial stress response in alcohol-mediated neurotoxicity

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $185,250 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Chronic, excessive alcohol use causes regional structural brain damage and cognitive disorders. Chronic alcohol misuse is also associated with a wide array of movement impairments. Chronic alcohol consumption alone, or together with alcoholic hepatic encephalopathy, can cause various types of tremor, asterixis, and cerebellar dysfunction. While alcohol-induced brain damage has been explained by alcohol’s effects on neural excitability or nutritional deficiency, we do not fully understand the pathogenic mechanism at the molecular and cellular levels by which alcohol exerts its toxicity and damages the nervous system. The nematode C. elegans is an amenable model organism that can be used for dissecting the pathological mechanism of alcoholic neurotoxicity. Our study in C. elegans shows that while alcohol strongly induces many conserved cellular stress responses, its main toxic effects are centered on mitochondrial function. Remarkably, we find that perpetual mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt) spares from a motor function deficit caused by chronic alcohol exposure. Moreover, a genetic manipulation that specifically induces neuron-specific UPRmt activation is sufficient to protect against alcohol-mediated movement impairment. We hypothesize that activation of a branch of UPRmt in a select neural population protects against alcoholic movement disorders. To test this hypothesis, we propose two specific aims: aim 1 will investigate how perpetual UPRmt protects against alcohol-mediated movement impairment; and aim 2 will identify the mechanism by which neuronal UPRmt leads to the protection against alcohol-mediated movement impairment. A detailed analysis of alcohol-mediated UPRmt and its intra- and intercellular signaling in the context of alcohol-mediated movement impairment will lead to effective druggable targets that protect against, or ameliorate, alcoholic movement impairment.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10708781
Project number
5R21AA029811-02
Recipient
ROSALIND FRANKLIN UNIV OF MEDICINE & SCI
Principal Investigator
Hongkyun Kim
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2023
Award amount
$185,250
Award type
5
Project period
2022-09-25 → 2025-08-31