Impaired Acetyl-CoA Compartmentalization Drives a Futile Lipogenic-Oxidative Cycle in N88S Seipinopathy
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The N88S mutation in human seipin causes a dominant motor neuron disease marked by ER stress and inclusion body formation, lipid imbalance, and oxidative damage. Yet the metabolic mechanisms connecting these defects remain poorly understood. Previous proteomic profiling revealed decreased protein levels of enzymes involved in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, fatty acid and carboxylic acid metabolism, and the glyoxylate cycle, suggesting impaired downstream utilization of peroxisome-derived acetyl-CoA. Guided by these findings, we investigated how peroxisomal function contributes to cellular dyshomeostasis. N88S seipin-expressing cells exhibited increased peroxisome abundance but defective routing of acetyl-CoA into mitochondrial and glyoxylate pathways, resulting in elevated reactive oxygen species (ROS), impaired glyoxylate cycle activation, and reduced metabolic adaptability to non-fermentable carbon sources. Loss of peroxisomes or forced cytosolic redirection of acetyl-CoA further exacerbated ER stress, ROS accumulation, lipid peroxidation, and the growth defect on N88S seipin-expressing cells, whereas inhibition of fatty acid synthesis mitigated oxidative damage. These findings demonstrate that N88S seipin triggers a futile cycle in which misrouted cytosolic acetyl-CoA drives lipogenesis, amplifying oxidative damage and ER stress. We conclude that defective peroxisome-mitochondria metabolic coupling and acetyl-CoA misrouting may represent central pathogenic mechanisms driving cellular dysfunction in N88S-linked seipinopathy.