Muscle-derived miR-126 regulates TDP-43 axonal local synthesis and NMJ integrity in ALS models.

Ionescu A, Ankol L, Ganapathy Subramaniam A, Altman T, Magen I, Cohen Y, Danino Y, Gradus-Pery T, Niv Y, Bar Avi O, Geller D, Ibraheem A, Cheng R, Steinberg N, Alfahel L, Duc P, Ergul-Ulger Z, Arslan D, Tan E, Rage F, Riva N, Quattrini A, Bekircan-Kurt CE, Israelson A, Dori A, Hornstein E, Perlson E
Nature neuroscience 2025
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterized by neuromuscular junction (NMJ) disruption and neurodegeneration. Recent findings highlight a pivotal role for TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) in forming axonal pathological condensates and facilitating NMJ disruption through inhibition of local protein synthesis. However, the mechanisms that drive local TDP-43 accumulation remain unknown. Here we identify that the TDP-43 axonal accumulation in peripheral nerves of SOD1 patients and mice stems from its aberrant local synthesis. This is a non-cell-autonomous process driven by muscle-derived miR-126a-5p extracellular vesicles (EVs). Inhibiting muscle secretion of miR-126a-5p prompts presynaptic TDP-43 synthesis and accumulation, which disrupts axonal translation and causes NMJ degeneration. Introducing miR-126 to SOD1G93A mice, primary co-cultures and human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived co-cultures with ALS mutations exhibits neuroprotective effects and delays motor decline. These findings identify a transcellular communication axis between muscles and motor neurons that regulates axonal local synthesis and NMJ maintenance, offering insights into ALS onset and progression.