Proteomics

Dataset Information

0

NSUN1-m5C is linked to TDP-43 neurotoxicity


ABSTRACT: In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), the nuclear RNA-binding protein TDP-43 mislocalises to the cytoplasm and forms insoluble aggregates, but the mechanisms controlling this remain unclear. We define a native TDP-43 interactome in human SH-SY5Y cells and identify proteins linked to the 5-methylcytosine (m5C) RNA modification as highly enriched. Using a Drosophila model of TDP-43 pathology, we show that aberrant activity of m5C-RNA methyltransferases Nsun1 drives TDP-43-induced m5C-RNA hypermethylation, while Nsun1 downregulation alleviates TDP-43–induced degeneration, lifespan deficits, and cytoplasmic accumulation. In human cells, TDP-43 selectively interacts with NSUN1 isoform 3 independently of RNA. Furthermore, NSUN1 is nucleolar and TDP-43 is largely nucleoplasmic, yet they interact in both compartments, suggesting functional roles beyond their predominant localisations. In ALS/FTD post-mortem frontal cortex, NSUN1 isoform 3 persists, while the shorter isoform is reduced, suggesting that a pool of NSUN1 capable of contributing to pathological TDP-43 interactions remains in disease. These findings suggest that TDP-43 neurotoxicity is coupled to NSUN1 activation and m5C-RNA methylation, revealing a potential therapeutic axis in ALS/FTD.

INSTRUMENT(S):

ORGANISM(S): Homo Sapiens (human)

TISSUE(S): Cell Culture

DISEASE(S): Disease Free

SUBMITTER: Leeanne McGurk  

LAB HEAD: Leeanne McGurk

PROVIDER: PXD070093 | Pride | 2025-11-03

REPOSITORIES: Pride

Dataset's files

Source:
Action DRS
LM-KD3.raw Raw
LM-KD4.raw Raw
LM-KD5.raw Raw
LM-KD6.raw Raw
LM-KD7.raw Raw
Items per page:
1 - 5 of 8

Similar Datasets

2018-07-25 | GSE115310 | GEO
2018-07-24 | PXD009969 | Pride
2025-02-20 | GSE285224 | GEO
2019-01-01 | GSE122069 | GEO
2025-04-14 | PXD058981 | Pride
2021-07-01 | GSE133047 | GEO
2020-10-20 | GSE153960 | GEO
2018-07-13 | GSE116622 | GEO
2021-12-04 | GSE182976 | GEO
2019-03-15 | GSE126542 | GEO