posted on 2025-04-16, 07:29authored byNibedita Pradhan, Santanu Shaw, Nihar Ranjan Jana
Impaired autophagy is a key contributor to aging and
a variety
of protein aggregation-linked neurodegenerative disorders. In this
direction, autophagy modulation is emerging as a therapeutic approach
to combat protein aggregation-related neuronal diseases. Herein, we
report that nanoascorbate, a biocompatible polymeric nanoform of vitamin
C, accelerates the clearance of mutant Huntingtin protein aggregates
in HD150Q, the cellular model of Huntington’s disease by restoring
blocked autophagy. We have confirmed that nanoascorbate induces autophagic
flux in autophagy-compromised Huntington’s model cells bearing
mutant Huntingtin aggregates, evident from the altered expression
level of the characteristic autophagy marker protein LC3BII and rapid
degradation of crucial cargo receptor SQSTM/p62. In addition, blockade
of autophagy induction using a potent autophagy inhibitor causes depression/failure
of clearance of protein aggregates by nanoascorbate, indicating that
nanoascorbate induces autophagy-mediated degradation. Furthermore,
nanoascorbate-mediated upregulation of autophagic flux is ROS- and
glutathione reductase-dependent. A brief incubation of 3h with a low
micromolar concentration of nanoascorbate has shown an average 90%
clearance of high-molecular-weight soluble aggregate of neurotoxic
mutant Huntingtin protein, within 2 days. Nanoascorbate is faster,
and a low micromolar concentration is sufficient compared to a high
molar concentration of trehalose, a conventional autophagy inducer,
that achieves only an average of 38% degradation after 96 h of prolonged
incubation. In general, induced HD150Q cells bearing neurotoxic polyglutamine
aggregates are prone to rapid apoptotic death. Nanoascorbate rescues
mutant huntingtin aggregate-bearing cells from apoptotic insult which
is evident from the lowered expression of cleaved caspase-3 manifolds,
after brief incubation with nanoascorbate. In addition, dietary supplementation
of nanoascorbate has shown moderate improvement in motor activity,
an increase in life span, and suppression of progressive polyQ-induced
eye degeneration to some extent in the transgenic Drosophila model of Huntington’s disease. Our findings manifest the
remarkable neurotherapeutic potential of the nanoform of ascorbate
via autophagy modulation in autophagy-compromised conditions as well
as a moderate neuroprotective effect in the transgenic Drosophila model of Huntington’s disease.
In addition, the current study emphasizes that modulation of autophagy
can be considered as a promising therapeutic approach for proteinopathy-related
neurodegenerative diseases.