| Literature DB >> 29273900 |
Christopher M Henstridge1,2,3, Dimitrios I Sideris4, Emily Carroll4, Sanziana Rotariu4, Sally Salomonsson4, Makis Tzioras4,5, Chris-Anne McKenzie6,7,8, Colin Smith6,7,8, Christine A F von Arnim9, Albert C Ludolph9, Dorothée Lulé9, Danielle Leighton6,8, Jon Warner6,8, Elaine Cleary6,8, Judith Newton6,8, Robert Swingler6,8, Siddharthan Chandran6,8, Thomas H Gillingwater4,8, Sharon Abrahams10,8, Tara L Spires-Jones11,12,13.
Abstract
In addition to motor neurone degeneration, up to 50% of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients present with cognitive decline. Understanding the neurobiological changes underlying these cognitive deficits is critical, as cognitively impaired patients exhibit a shorter survival time from symptom onset. Given the pathogenic role of synapse loss in other neurodegenerative diseases in which cognitive decline is apparent, such as Alzheimer's disease, we aimed to assess synaptic integrity in the ALS brain. Here, we have applied a unique combination of high-resolution imaging of post-mortem tissue with neuropathology, genetic screening and cognitive profiling of ALS cases. Analyses of more than 1 million synapses using two complimentary high-resolution techniques (electron microscopy and array tomography) revealed a loss of synapses from the prefrontal cortex of ALS patients. Importantly, synapse loss was significantly greater in cognitively impaired cases and was not due to cortical atrophy, nor associated with dementia-associated neuropathology. Interestingly, we found a trend between pTDP-43 pathology and synapse loss in the frontal cortex and discovered pTDP-43 puncta at a subset of synapses in the ALS brains. From these data, we postulate that synapse loss in the prefrontal cortex represents an underlying neurobiological substrate of cognitive decline in ALS.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29273900 PMCID: PMC5773656 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-017-1797-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Summary demographics of all donors
| Number | Male/female | Age at diagnosis | Age at PM | Site of onset | Riluzole (yes/no) | Disease duration | Time between ECAS and death | ECAS total | ALS-specific ECAS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Control | 5 | 4/1 | 61 (53–77) | |||||||
| ALS | 20 | 9/11 | 63 (40–89) | |||||||
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| Control | 14 | 11/3 | 79 (62–95) | |||||||
| ALS | 29 | 18/11 | 60 (32–75) | 64 (40–89) | 20 Limb, 7 bulbar | 17/9 | 44 (17–216) | |||
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| Control | 14 | 11/3 | 79 (62–95) | |||||||
| ALS | 16 | 9/7 | 60 (32–71) | 64 (40–83) | 11 Limb, 5 bulbar | 4/6 | 39 (24–216) | 17 (4–42) | 116 ± 4.9 | 86 ± 3.6 |
| ALSci | 7 | 4/3 | 61 (38–72) | 68 (43–75) | 4 Limb, 2 bulbar | 4/3 | 49 (34–64) | 14 (3–61) | 98 ± 5.9 | 72 ± 7.1 |
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| ALS | 9 | 6/3 | 58 (41–69) | 3 Limb, 1 bulbar, | 28 (12–84) | 112.6 ± 5.5 | ||||
| ALSci | 6 | 4/2 | 72 (65–80) | 5 Limb, 1 bulbar | 15 (1–36) | 62.3 ± 16.6 | ||||
PM post-mortem, ECAS Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioral ALS Screen, EM electron microscopy, ALSci ALS with cognitive impairment
Primary antibody information
| Histopathology | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | Company | Code | Dilution | Pre-treatment |
| Beta amyloid (BA4) | Dako | M087201-2 | 1:100 | 98% Formic acid 5 min |
| pTDP-43 | 2B Scientific | CAC-TIP-PTD-MO1 | 1:4000 | Pressure cooker/citric acid |
| pTau (AT8) | Thermo | MN1020 | 1:2500 | None |
| GFAP | Dako | Z0334 | 1:800 | None |
| CD68 | Dako | M0876 | 1:100 | Pressure cooker/citric acid |
Fig. 1Synapse loss in ALS frontal cortex. Representative electron micrographs showing two excitatory synapses in the frontal cortex of a healthy control (a) and an ALS case (b). Edges of the post-synaptic density (PSD) are marked by red arrowheads and pre-synaptic terminals by black asterisks. The white asterisk in b highlights an electron dense, degenerating presynaptic terminal. Scale bars 100 nm. Decrease in synaptic density in the frontal cortex [(c) 2-tailed unpaired t test; p = 0.016], and increased numbers of degenerating synapses [(d) 2-tailed Mann–Whitney test; p = 0.014] in ALS patients (n = 20) compared to controls (n = 5), measured using TEM. Each data point represents the mean total synapse (c) or degenerating synapse (d) count per 100 µm2 for each individual. Three-dimensional reconstructions of fifteen 70 nm array tomography sections from a control frontal cortex (e) and an ALS frontal cortex (f), stained for synaptophysin (green) and DAPI (white). Scale bar is 10 µm. g Decrease in synaptic puncta (2-tailed unpaired t test; p = 0.017) in ALS patients compared to controls, measured using array tomography. Each data point represents the mean synapse count per mm3 of frontal cortex, for each individual (control n = 14; ALS n = 29). Blue icons = C9orf72 expansions, Red icons = SOD1 variant and Green icons = NEK1 variant. h Cortical thickness comparisons between control (n = 7) and ALS (n = 34) revealed no difference (2-tailed unpaired t test; p = 0.76). Each data point represents the mean of ten measurements per cortical block. All histogram bars plot the mean ± SD. i 3D reconstruction of 25 array tomography sections (each 70 nm thick), stained for synaptophysin (red), PSD95 (blue), pTDP-43 (green) and DAPI (white). A large perinuclear pTDP-43 aggregate (white arrow), numerous pTDP-43 + ve neuritic threads (white arrowheads) and small pTDP-43 puncta (open arrows) are clearly visible. Scale bar 10 µm. By cropping the image in i, compressing 3 consecutive sections and then splitting the channels, it is evident in panel (j) that pTDP-43 aggregates are found both in some pre (synaptophysin, red) and post (PSD95, blue) synaptic compartments. Scale bar 1 µm
Fig. 2Synapse loss in the ALS frontal cortex associates with cognitive decline. a Graph showing all 23 cognitively profiled cases and their total ECAS scores (squares) and ALS-specific ECAS scores (circles). Solid black line represents the performance threshold for abnormality for total ECAS score (105) and the dashed line for ALS-specific ECAS score (77). This reveals 7 cases fell below the total ECAS threshold, indicating cognitive impairment and 6 of those cases fell below the ALS-specific threshold (red shapes). b Histogram showing synapse density in the frontal cortex of control, ALS unimpaired (ALS) and ALS impaired (ALSci) cases. One-Way ANOVA revealed a significant difference between the groups (F = 6.6; p = 0.004) and the Tukey post hoc test revealed a significant difference between control and ALSci (p < 0.01). Open shapes = cases not genotyped, Blue icons = C9orf72 expansions, Red icons = SOD1 variant and Green icons = NEK1 variant. c Cortical thickness did not differ between any of the groups (One-Way ANOVA; F = 0.46, p = 0.64). The presence of amyloid (d), pTau (e) or pTDP-43 (f) had no effect on cognitive score (2-tailed unpaired t tests; p > 0.05). Red icons = ALSci. All histogram bars plot the mean ± SD
Fig. 3Synapse density in the ALS motor cortex does not associate with cognitive decline. Three-dimensional reconstruction of twenty-four 70 nm array tomography sections from a control motor cortex (a) and an ALS motor cortex (b), stained for synaptophysin (green) and DAPI (white). Scale bar is 10 µm. c Histogram showing no change in synaptic puncta within the motor cortex (2-tailed unpaired t test; p = 0.73) between control and ALS. Each data point represents the mean synapse count per mm3 of motor cortex, for each individual (control n = 7; ALS n = 25). d When split by cognitive status, there is no difference in synapse density within the motor cortex (One-Way ANOVA; F = 0.06, p = 0.94). e Histogram showing a significant decrease in the thickness of ALS motor cortex compared to controls (2-tailed unpaired t test; p = 0.0002). f Both ALS and ALSci motor cortices are significantly thinner than control (One-Way ANOVA; F = 9.98, p = 0.0006; Tukey post hoc test; p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). The presence of beta-amyloid (g), pTau (h) and pTDP-43 (i) in the motor cortex, had no effect on synapse density (2-tailed unpaired t tests; p > 0.05). The presence of beta-amyloid (j), pTau (k) and pTDP-43 (l) in the motor cortex, had no effect on cognitive score (2-tailed unpaired t tests; p > 0.05). Red icons = ALSci. All histogram bars plot the mean ± SD