Glutamine catabolism supports amino acid biosynthesis and suppresses the integrated stress response to promote photoreceptor survival

Author:

Goswami Moloy T1,Weh Eric1,Subramanya Shubha1,Weh Katherine M1,Durumutla Hima Bindu12,Hager Heather1,Miller Nicholas1,Chaudhury Sraboni1,Andren Anthony3,Sajjakulnukit Peter3,Zhang Li3,Besirli Cagri G1ORCID,Lyssiotis Costas A345ORCID,Wubben Thomas J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Michigan

2. Molecular and Developmental Biology Graduate Program, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

3. Department of Molecular & Integrative Physiology, University of Michigan

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Michigan

5. Rogel Cancer Center, University of Michigan

Abstract

Photoreceptor loss results in vision loss in many blinding diseases, and metabolic dysfunction underlies photoreceptor degeneration. So, exploiting photoreceptor metabolism is an attractive strategy to prevent vision loss. Yet, the metabolic pathways that maintain photoreceptor health remain largely unknown. Here, we investigated the dependence of photoreceptors on Gln catabolism. Gln is converted to glutamate via glutaminase (GLS), so mice lacking GLS in rod photoreceptors were generated to inhibit Gln catabolism. Loss of GLS produced rapid rod photoreceptor degeneration. In vivo metabolomic methodologies and metabolic supplementation identified Gln catabolism as critical for glutamate and aspartate biosynthesis. Concordant with this amino acid deprivation, the integrated stress response (ISR) was activated with protein synthesis attenuation, and inhibiting the ISR delayed photoreceptor loss. Furthermore, supplementing asparagine, which is synthesized from aspartate, delayed photoreceptor degeneration. Hence, Gln catabolism is integral to photoreceptor health, and these data reveal a novel metabolic axis in these metabolically-demanding neurons.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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