Germinal mono-allelic loss-of-function mutations of NEK1 drive amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) at variable penetrance, presumably through haploinsufficiency. Modeling the ALS-associated Arg812Ter mutation in mice revealed that the resulting truncated Nek1 (Nek1t) is aggregation-prone, particularly in alpha-motoneurons (αMNs), and drives canonical ALS symptoms when bi-allelically expressed (Nek1t/t). Promyelocytic leukemia (Pml) ablation allows for ALS symptoms to occur even in heterozygote Nek1wt/t animals, mimicking the human situation. Pml precludes disease occurrence by promoting SUMO-facilitated degradation of Nek1t proteins through PML nuclear bodies (NBs). Conversely, Pml induction, achieved by activating the interferon pathway via poly(I:C) treatment, clears Nek1t puncta in αMNs, dramatically reducing ALS-associated symptoms and extending survival by 5 months. Our studies highlight the role of mutant NEK1 expression in ALS pathogenesis and identifies activation of interferon pathways as a candidate therapeutic strategy that promotes Pml-triggered SUMOylation/degradation of toxic misfolded proteins in vivo, yielding dramatic clinical improvement. These observations provide strong proof-of-concept support to validate PML as a relevant therapeutic target in neurodegenerative conditions associated with protein misfolding and putative aggregation.
Georgiadou et al. (Tue,) studied this question.