| Literature DB >> 26667278 |
Tanja Jürgens1, Mehrnoosh Jafari2, Mario Kreutzfeldt3, Erik Bahn4, Wolfgang Brück4, Martin Kerschensteiner5, Doron Merkler6.
Abstract
Grey matter pathology has emerged as an important contributor to long-term disability in multiple sclerosis. To better understand where and how neuronal damage in the grey matter is initiated, we used high resolution confocal microscopy of Golgi-Cox impregnated tissue sections and reconstructed single cortical projection neurons in autopsies from eight patients with long-standing relapsing-remitting or secondary progressive multiple sclerosis and eight control patients without neurological disease. Analysis of several hundred individual neurons located in the insular, frontotemporal and occipital lobe revealed a widespread and pronounced loss of dendritic spines in multiple sclerosis cortex that occurs independent of cortical demyelination and axon loss. The presence of a primary synaptic pathology in the normal-appearing cortex of multiple sclerosis patients challenges current disease concepts and has important implications for our understanding of disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: cortical projection neurons; demyelination; dendritic spines; multiple sclerosis; neuropathology; synaptopathy
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26667278 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awv353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501