| Literature DB >> 28477284 |
Julianna J Tomlinson1,2,3, Bojan Shutinoski4,5, Li Dong6, Fanyi Meng4, Dina Elleithy4, Nathalie A Lengacher4, Angela P Nguyen4, Greg O Cron7,8,9, Qiubo Jiang4, Erik D Roberson10, Robert L Nussbaum11, Nour K Majbour12, Omar M El-Agnaf12, Steffany A Bennett4,13,5, Diane C Lagace4,13,14, John M Woulfe4,13,6, Subash Sad5, Earl G Brown4,5, Michael G Schlossmacher15,16,17,18.
Abstract
Braak and Del Tredici have proposed that typical Parkinson disease (PD) has its origins in the olfactory bulb and gastrointestinal tract. However, the role of the olfactory system has insufficiently been explored in the pathogeneses of PD and Alzheimer disease (AD) in laboratory models. Here, we demonstrate applications of a new method to process mouse heads for microscopy by sectioning, mounting, and staining whole skulls ('holocranohistochemistry'). This technique permits the visualization of the olfactory system from the nasal cavity to mitral cells and dopamine-producing interneurons of glomeruli in the olfactory bulb. We applied this method to two specific goals: first, to visualize PD- and AD-linked gene expression in the olfactory system, where we detected abundant, endogenous α-synuclein and tau expression in the olfactory epithelium. Furthermore, we observed amyloid-β plaques and proteinase-K-resistant α-synuclein species, respectively, in cranial nerve-I of APP- and human SNCA-over-expressing mice. The second application of the technique was to the modeling of gene-environment interactions in the nasal cavity of mice. We tracked the infection of a neurotropic respiratory-enteric-orphan virus from the nose pad into cranial nerves-I (and -V) and monitored the ensuing brain infection. Given its abundance in the olfactory epithelia, we questioned whether α-synuclein played a role in innate host defenses to modify the outcome of infections. Indeed, Snca-null mice were more likely to succumb to viral encephalitis versus their wild-type littermates. Moreover, using a bacterial sepsis model, Snca-null mice were less able to control infection after intravenous inoculation with Salmonella typhimurium. Together, holocranohistochemistry enabled new discoveries related to α-synuclein expression and its function in mice. Future studies will address: the role of Mapt and mutant SNCA alleles in infection paradigms; the contribution of xenobiotics in the initiation of idiopathic PD; and the safety to the host when systemically targeting α-synuclein by immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: APP/Aβ; Alzheimer disease; Exposome; Genome; Histology; Infection; Inoculation; MAPT/tau; Neuropathology; Parkinson disease; SNCA/α-synuclein; Susceptibility; Synucleinopathy
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28477284 PMCID: PMC5446848 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-017-1726-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
Fig. 1Whole head mounting allows for visualization of the intact olfactory system by routine microscopy. a Magnetic resonance image of an adult mouse head with sagittal and coronal lines (dotted) depicting examples of levels for sectioning. b Luxol fast blue-stained, and c haemotoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained, sagittal head sections (all, 5 μm) from an adult mouse that visualize, among other structures: the brain with an intact olfactory bulb (b more medial; c lateral), turbine within the ethmoid sinus, the palate, tongue (“T”), alveolar bone (and teeth), an intact olfactory epithelium including cranial nerve (CN)-I fibers as well as CN-V at the base of the skull (c arrows). d Tyrosine hydroxylase immunohistochemistry-based staining of an intact skull section from an adult mouse (at an intermediate level) highlighting the Substantia nigra of the midbrain, neostriatum, and dopamine-producing neurons of olfactory glomeruli (brown staining). e Higher magnification of H&E stained, sagittal section of the olfactory system in an adult mouse. ES ethmoidal sinus, CP cribriform plate, GL glomeruli; asterisk denotes axonal bundles of CN-I. f H&E staining of an adult mouse skull prepared for coronal sectioning at the level of the olfactory bulb (OB) and turbine/ES, as depicted in a. Scale bars represent 2 mm (b–d, f); 200 μm (e, left image); 100 μm (e, right image)
Fig. 2α-Synuclein and tau are abundant constituents of the olfactory epithelium. a–g Immunohistochemistry (IHC)-based staining of α-synuclein in sections of whole skull preparations from adult mice reveals its specific expression in olfactory receptor neurons and CN-I (asterisk). Detection of human α-synuclein expression in adult dbl-PAC-tg(SNCA A53T)+/+; Snca −/− (a, b, d), absent in Snca-null (c, d) mice using antibodies (Ab) hSA4 (a–c) and LB509 (d, e). Insets in b and d are of olfactory epithelium (OE) at higher magnification and reveal α-synuclein expression in the dendrites of olfactory receptor neurons. f, g Endogenous, murine α-synuclein expression in the OE and CN-I, but not the respiratory epithelium (RE) of adult wt mice (Ab, Syn-1). h Typical staining of olfactory marker protein (OMP) in the OE of an adult wt mouse. i Expression pattern of α-synuclein in paraffin-embedded sections of human OE tissue collected at autopsy (Ab, LB509). Indirect immunofluorescence-based microscopy to co-label α-synuclein and OMP in olfactory receptor neurons in adult dbl-PAC- tg(SNCA A53T)+/+; Snca −/− (j–l) versus Snca-null (m–o) mice. Arrows in l and inset denote co-labelled dendritic knobs of olfactory neurons projecting into the ethmoid sinus. No double labelling is seen in o, as expected. IHC staining for specific, endogenous tau expression in the olfactory epithelium (OE) of adult wt (p, q) and Mapt-null (r) mice. IHC-based staining for amyloid-beta protein (Aβ) in sagittal sections of 6-month-old APP-transgenic (s–t) and wt (u) mice reveals Aβ-positive plaques in CN-I and throughout the olfactory bulb (arrowheads) in the former. ES ethmoid sinus; CP cribriform plate, GL glomeruli, asterisk denotes CN-I, LP lamina propria. Scale bars represent 1 mm (s); 400 μm (c, p, r); 200 μm (a); 100 μm (b, d–j, q, t, u)
Fig. 3Tracking a viral infection by holocranohistochemistry following nasal inoculation. a–c Representative IHC-based, microscopic images of reovirus [serotype-3 Dearing (T3D)] infection of olfactory receptor neurons and axons of cranial nerve (CN)-I following nasal inoculation of 1–2-day-old wt mice using an anti-reovirus-T3D antibody (brown). Higher magnification of the olfactory epithelium (OE) in insets (a, b) reveals reovirus protein expression in dendrites and throughout ORNs as well as in basal cells sitting above the lamina propria; images are representative of viral infection observed 1–5 dpi. c Lower magnification of the OE highlighting residual viral protein expression (arrowheads) and the repair of previously infected neurons (asterisk), as routinely observed 5–10 dpi (arrowheads). d Representative IHC-based images of the olfactory system in mock-treated and reovirus-T3D infected, wt mice to monitor microglia activation and macrophage recruitment (anti-Iba1) 3 dpi. Note the robust immune response in areas of the OE, CN-I and adjacent olfactory bulb. H&E staining of sagittal sections of a 3-day-old, wt mouse processed for whole skull mounting (e). f Higher magnification of 3-day-old mouse pup highlighting the relay ganglion (“Gasseri”) of CN-V (asterisk); T tongue, ES ethmoid sinus. g Reovirus-T3D infection of a respiratory epithelial (RE) cell (brown). h Reovirus infection of neurons outside the brain within the ganglion Gasseri of CN-V (asterisk) and neurons within the brain (arrowhead), as shown in a wt mouse 11 dpi. Representative IHC-based images of reovirus-T3D infected neurons in the central nervous system of a wt mouse, where viral titres peak 8–9 dpi, thereby leading to lethal encephalitis. i Examples for viral infection of neurons in the thalamus, j the midbrain, and k of a Purkinje cell of the cerebellum are shown by anti-reovirus-T3D staining. Inset in j shows reovirus-T3D Ab-positive, cytoplasmic inclusions in an infected neuron. Open arrow heads denote dystrophic neurites. Scale bars represent 5 mm (e); 500 mm (f); 200 μm (d, h); 100 μm (a–c, g, i–k)
Fig. 4Endogenous α-Synuclein protects the murine host against microbial infections. a Representative image of indirect, immunofluorescence-based microscopy of reovirus-T3D infected olfactory receptor neurons 3 dpi. Scale bar represents 100 μm. b Quantification of endogenous α-synuclein protein concentration in P1 to P45 wt mice. Each time point represents the average of n ≥ 3 pups ± SEM. c Schema of experimental design to test survival and viral load after reovirus-T3D inoculation. Wild-type (wt) and Snca-null (Snca−/−) littermates were inoculated via the nose pad with a viral dose of 1.7 × 105 plaque-forming units (PFU). d Graph for survival assay. Littermates from heterozygous breeding pairs were used where wt n = 14, Snca +/− n = 9 (heterozygous); Snca −/− n = 12 (male and female). Data were analyzed using the log-rank (Mantel–Cox) test, where p = 0.042 (asterisk) indicates a significant difference in direct comparison of WT with Snca −/− mice. e Quantification of replication competent viral titres (PFU) in the brain at 10 dpi. wt (n = 7) and Snca −/− (n = 8) male and female littermates were used. f Schema of experimental paradigm for bacterial Salmonella typhimurium infection, in which WT (n = 7) and Snca-null (n = 8) 8-week-old males and female littermates were inoculated intravenously with 200 colony-forming units (CFU). g Mice were sacrificed 5 dpi and spleens were harvested to assay the bacterial load in resected organs (CFU). A number of CFU per spleen of individual mice are plotted by genotype; significance was determined between genotypes using a Mann–Whitney test where p = 0.04 (asterisk)