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Nature
Published

DNA damage burden causes selective CUX2 neuron loss in neuroinflammation

Authors

Laura Morcom, Wenlong Xia, Zhaoyang Xu, Yashika Awasthi, Celine Geywitz, Matthew O Ellis, Tomas Noli, Amel Zulji, Daniel Yamamoto, Gemma C Girdler, Li Kai, Keying Zhu, Mingming Wei, Xiao-Yan Tang, Kimberly K Hoi, Julio Gonzalez-Maya, Greg J Duncan, Adrien M Vaquie, Diana Gold Diaz, Riki Kawaguchi, Erdong Liu, Yu Sun, Denny Yang, Gregory D Jordan, I-Ling Lu, Staffan Holmqvist, Theresa Bartels, Katherine Ridley, Jennifer Ja-Yoon Choi, Santos J Franco, Eric J Huang, Ben Emery, Daniel Geschwind, Lucas Schirmer, Gabriel Balmus, Brian Popko, Stephen P J Fancy, David H Rowitch

Abstract

Nature. 2026 Apr 1. doi: 10.1038/s41586-026-10310-3. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Neurodegeneration shows regional and cell-type-specific patterns in ageing and disease1, but the underlying mechanisms for cell-type-specific neuronal losses remain poorly understood. Previous studies have shown that upper cortical layer thinning occurs in progressive human multiple sclerosis (MS) and that cortical layer 2 and layer 3 (L2/3) excitatory neurons (L2/3ENs) that express CUT-like homeobox 2 (CUX2) are selectively vulnerable to degeneration2. Here we report that L2/3ENs within MS cortical lesions have an elevated DNA damage burden. DNA damage and selective loss of L2/3ENs were recapitulated in diverse mouse models of demyelination and pan-cortical inflammation, confirming their intrinsic vulnerability. Functions of Cux2 and activating transcription factor 4 (Atf4) were essential for resilience of L2/3ENs during postnatal neuroinflammation, acting in neurons to enhance DNA double-strand break repair. Interferon-γ, a cytokine implicated in MS pathogenesis3,4, was sufficient to elevate levels of reactive oxygen species, leading to DNA damage-mediated neuronal death in vitro, and caused selective depletion of L2/3 neurons in mice. These findings indicate that DNA damage burden and inadequate repair in CUX2+ L2/3ENs contributes to selective vulnerability in neuroinflammatory injury.

PMID:41922773 | DOI:10.1038/s41586-026-10310-3

UK DRI Authors

Gabriel Balmus

Prof Gabriel Balmus

Group Leader

Identifying genetic and environmental factors involved in DNA damage, neurodegeneration and ageing in neurons

Prof Gabriel Balmus