Revving up nerve cells

Activating mutated mitofusin proteins re-energizes damaged mitochondria and could help regrow damaged nerves in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.

Confocal microscopy image of a motor neuron from a patient with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2A after treatment with a mitofusin activator. The drug improved the structure, fitness and movement of mitochondria (shown in yellow and orange). Image credit: Dorn II et al. (CC BY 4.0)

Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2A is a rare genetic childhood disease where dying back of nerve cells leads to muscle loss in the arms and legs, causing permanent disability. There is no known treatment.

In this form of CMT, mutations in a protein called mitofusin 2 damage structures inside cells known as mitochondria. Mitochondria generate most of the chemical energy to power a cell, but when mitofusin 2 is mutated, the mitochondria are less healthy and are unable to move within the cell, depriving the cells of energy. This particularly causes problems in the long nerve cells that stretch from the spinal cord to the arm and leg muscles.

Now, Franco, Dang et al. wanted to see whether re-activating mitofusin 2 could correct the damage to the mitochondria and restore the nerve connections to the muscles. The researchers tested a new class of drug called a mitofusin activator on nerve cells grown in the laboratory after being taken from people suffering from CMT2A, and also from a mouse model of the disease. Mitofusin activators improved the structure, fitness and movement of mitochondria in both human and mice nerve cells. Franco, Dang et al. then tested the drug in the mice with a CMT2A mutation and found that it could also stimulate nerves to regrow and so reverse muscle loss and weakness.

This is the first time scientists have succeeded to reverse the effects of CMT2A in nerve cells of mice and humans. However, these drugs will still need to go through extensive testing in clinical trials before being made widely available to patients. If approved, mitofusin activators may also be beneficial for patients suffering from other genetic conditions that damage mitochondria.