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Targeting the Mitochondrial Phenotype in Cockayne Syndrome Patient Cells: From Bioenergetic Fragility to Pharmacologic Rescue

Kose, M.; McCormick, E.; Keith, K.; Remes, C.; Haroon, S.; Nakamaru-Ogiso, E.; Falk, M. J.

2026-05-26 molecular biology
10.64898/2026.05.25.727505 bioRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundCockayne syndrome (CS), primarily caused by autosomal recessive pathogenic variants in ERCC6 (CSB) or ERCC8 (CSA), is a transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair disorder. CS frequently presents with features similar to primary mitochondrial disease (PMD), including leukodystrophy, lactic acidemia, and skeletal muscle mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion. How this mitochondrial phenotype arises at the cellular level, and whether it can be pharmacologically targeted, is not yet clear. MethodsWe characterized mtDNA content, respiratory chain (RC) protein abundance, mitochondrial biogenesis signaling pathways, and oxidative phosphorylation capacity in primary fibroblasts from two siblings with identical compound heterozygous ERCC6 pathogenic variants (c.1526+1G>T; c.2800C>A, p.Pro934Thr) despite marked intrafamilial phenotypic divergence. A combined metabolic stress exposure (galactose, reduced glutamine, and buthionine sulfoximine, (BSO)) which reduced CS cell survival was used to screen for therapeutic leads among twenty-three candidate mitochondrial disease therapeutic compounds. Lead compounds were mechanistically validated at the level of mitochondrial superoxide, total cellular oxidative stress, glutathione, and autophagic flux. ResultsPatient fibroblasts exhibited several hallmarks of PMD, including reduced mtDNA content, decreased expression of complex I subunit NDUFB8, elevated expression of TOM20 with paradoxically decreased PGC1 suggestive of impaired mitophagic clearance, and decreased mitochondrial respiratory capacity. Under combined metabolic stress, ATP-levels indicative of survival in CS patient fibroblasts selectively collapsed to [~]20% of controls. Five dual-rescue compounds, defined as agents that reproducibly restored ATP-based cell survival in both patient fibroblast lines under stress, were identified, including N-acetylcysteine (NAC), coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), rapamycin, taurine, and (-)-epicatechin. Mechanistic profiling resolved three functional classes of therapeutic effects in CS cells: (1) upstream mitochondrial reactive oxygen species reduction (NAC, CoQ10); (2) mTORC1 inhibition bypassing defective stress-induced autophagic induction (rapamycin); and (3) extra-mitochondrial improvement in cellular stress resilience ((-)- epicatechin, taurine). ConclusionsERCC6-based CSB deficiency produced a stress-sensitive and physiologically complex mitochondrial phenotype in patient fibroblasts that was pharmacologically treatable by targeting three mechanistically distinct pathways. Oxidative and broader stress buffering, autophagy modulation via mTORC1 inhibition, and enhanced cellular resilience highlight novel therapeutic opportunities to be advanced to clinical trials in CSB patients.

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