| Literature DB >> 32095235 |
Seiji Kaji1, Takakuni Maki1, Tomoyuki Ishimoto1, Hodaka Yamakado1, Ryosuke Takahashi1.
Abstract
Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a debilitating and fatal neurodegenerative disorder. The disease severity warrants urgent development of disease-modifying therapy, but the disease pathogenesis is still enigmatic. Neurodegeneration in MSA brains is preceded by the emergence of glial cytoplasmic inclusions (GCIs), which are insoluble α-synuclein accumulations within oligodendrocytes (OLGs). Thus, preventive strategies against GCI formation may suppress disease progression. However, although numerous studies have tried to elucidate the molecular pathogenesis of GCI formation, difficulty remains in understanding the pathological interaction between the two pivotal aspects of GCIs; α-synuclein and OLGs. The difficulty originates from several enigmas: 1) what triggers the initial generation and possible propagation of pathogenic α-synuclein species? 2) what contributes to OLG-specific accumulation of α-synuclein, which is abundantly expressed in neurons but not in OLGs? and 3) how are OLGs and other glial cells affected and contribute to neurodegeneration? The primary pathogenesis of GCIs may involve myelin dysfunction and dyshomeostasis of the oligodendroglial cellular environment such as autophagy and iron metabolism. We have previously reported that oligodendrocyte precursor cells are more prone to develop intracellular inclusions in the presence of extracellular fibrillary α-synuclein. This finding implies a possibility that the propagation of GCI pathology in MSA brains is mediated through the internalization of pathological α-synuclein into oligodendrocyte precursor cells. In this review, in order to discuss the pathogenesis of GCIs, we will focus on the composition of neuronal and oligodendroglial inclusions in synucleinopathies. Furthermore, we will introduce some hypotheses on how α-synuclein pathology spreads among OLGs in MSA brains, in the light of our data from the experiments with primary oligodendrocyte lineage cell culture. While various reports have focused on the mysterious source of α-synuclein in GCIs, insights into the mechanism which regulates the uptake of pathological α-synuclein into oligodendroglial cells may yield the development of the disease-modifying therapy for MSA. The interaction between glial cells and α-synuclein is also highlighted with previous studies of post-mortem human brains, cultured cells, and animal models, which provide comprehensive insight into GCIs and the MSA pathomechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Astrocyte; Glial cytoplasmic inclusion; Microglia; Multiple system atrophy; Neurodegeneration; Oligodendrocyte; Oligodendrocyte precursor cell; Prion; α-Synuclein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32095235 PMCID: PMC7025408 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-020-0185-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Comparison of molecular components within GCIs, NCIs, and LBs* through analysis with post-mortem human brains
| Protein | GCIs | NCIs | LBs* | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-synuclein | + | + | + | [ |
| Heat shock protein 70 and 90 | + | ND | + | [ |
| DJ-1 | + | ND | – | [ |
| αB-Crystallin | + | – | +/− | [ |
| α/β-tubulin | + | – | + | [ |
| Tau (non-phosphorylated) | +/− | – | +/− | [ |
| Tau (phosphorylated) | – | ND | +/− | [ |
| Microtubule associated protein-1 | +/− | ND | + | [ |
| Microtubule associated protein-2 | – | – | + | [ |
| p25α/TPPP (tubulin polymerization-promoting protein) | + | + | + | [ |
| Ubiquitin | + | + | + | [ |
| SUMO-1 (small ubiquitin modifier 1) | + | ND | +/− | [ |
| 20s proteasome subunits | + | + | – | [ |
| HDAC6 | + | – | + | [ |
| Parkin | +/− | ND | + | [ |
| Pael-R | – | ND | + | [ |
| Dorfin | + | +/− | + | [ |
| NEDD-8 | + | + | + | [ |
| NUB1 (Negative regulator of ubiquitin-like protein 1) | + | + | + | [ |
| Synphilin-1 | + | +/− | + | [ |
| F-box only protein (FBXO7) | + | ND | + | [ |
| p62/SQSTM1 | + | ND | + | [ |
| LC3 | + | – | + | [ |
| NBR1 | + | – | + | [ |
| AMBRA1 | + | +/− | + | [ |
| Bcl-2 | + | ND | ND | [ |
| HtrA2/Omi | + | + | + | [ |
| Parkin co-regulated gene (PACBG) | + | +/− | + | [ |
| XIAP (X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein) | + | + | + | [ |
| Apoptosome (cytochrome c, Apaf-1, caspase-9) | + | + | + | [ |
| 14–3-3 protein | + | + | + | [ |
| Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) | + | ND | ND | [ |
| LRRK2 | + | ND | +/− | [ |
| Transferrin | + | ND | ND | [ |
| Ferritin | + | ND | +/− | [ |
| Metallothionein-III | + | ND | ND | [ |
| Copper/zinc superoxide dismutase | +/− | ND | + | [ |
| Midkine | + | – | ND | [ |
| Leu-7 | + | ND | ND | [ |
| Elk1 | + | ND | + | [ |
| cdk-5 | + | ND | + | [ |
| P39 | + | ND | ND | [ |
| DARPP32 | + | ND | ND | [ |
| Rab5, Rabatpin5 | + | ND | + | [ |
| Sept4 | + | ND | + | [ |
| Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) | + | ND | + | [ |
| Apolipoprotein E | +/− | ND | +*** | [ |
| Clusterin/apolipoprotein J | +/− | – | +/− | [ |
| matrix metalloproteinase-2 | + | ND | ND | [ |
| transactive response DNA-binding protein of 43 kDa (TDP-43) | +/− | +/− | +/− | [ |
| Campbell-Switzer | + | +/− | + | [ |
| Bodian | + | +/− | + | [ |
| Bielshowsky | + | +/− | + | [ |
| Gallyas | + | + | – | [ |
The presence/absence of each protein’s expression within GCIs and NCIs in MSA brains, and within LBs in PD brains is displayed. The lists of proteins and their profiles described above are modified from [72, 95, 96].
+, positive; +/−, partially or weakly positive; −, negative; ND, not described. *, described as +, or +/− when the positivity was recognized in either brainstem-type or cortical LBs; **, proteins other than iron-related proteins; ***, amino-terminal 17 kDa fragment of Apolipoprotein E
Fig. 1Hypothetical overview of GCI pathogenesis and post-mortem analysis of TPPP/p25α translocation. a: Hypothetical overview of a normal OLG (left) and a pathological OLG generating GCI (right). Left: Intracellular homeostasis is maintained by normal expression levels of myelin-associated proteins and their colocalization with TPPP/p25α as well as autophagic degradation of endogenous α-syn and balanced iron metabolism. Right: Aggregation formation is enhanced by decreased expression of myelin-associated proteins, cytosolic translocation of TPPP/p25α, impaired autophagy-lysosomal degradation, and oxidation of ferrous to ferric ions. Secretion of pathological α-syn in response to insufficient degradation leads to microglial and astrocytic activation. OLG dysfunction also causes compromised neuronal support such as reduced production of neurotrophic factors. b: Translocation of TPPP/p25α from myelin to cell bodies in the frontal cortex white matter of a control patient (left) and an MSA patient (right). The scale bar represents 50 μm. c: Localization of TPPP/p25α (red) and its interaction with MBP (green) in the frontal cortex white matter of a control patient (left) and an MSA patient (right). Blue; DAPI. The scale bar represents 10 μm
Fig. 2Difference in the response to extracellularly applied pathological α-syn between two oligodendroglial cells. Pathological α-syn with seeding property hypothetically propagates from OLG to OLG. Extracellular α-syn fibrils do not induce inclusions when they are applied to mature OLGs. Seed internalization can occur more drastically during the immature state of OLG differentiation including the precursor state. The mechanism which regulates the uptake of misfolded α-syn may be shared by normal OPCs and pathological OLGs in MSA brains, but not by normal OLGs. a: intercellular localization of α-syn (green)-immunoreactive inclusions in platelet-derived growth factor receptor α (red)-positive primary rat OPCs, which were incubated for 72 h with 1 μM human recombinant α-syn pre-formed fibrils (PFFs). b: MBP (red)-positive primary rat OLGs with extracellular Thioflavin S (green) immunoreactivity, which were incubated for 24 h with 1 μM human recombinant α-syn PFFs after maturation. c: MBP (red)-positive primary rat OLGs containing Thioflavin S (green)-positive intracellular inclusions. OLGs were differentiated from OPCs that were pre-incubated for 24 h with 1 μM human recombinant α-syn PFFs. a-c: Each scale bar represents 10 μm. Blue; DAPI.
Fig. 3Hypothetical schema showing OLG-to-OLG propagation and accumulation of pathological α-syn. Pathological α-syn with seeding property hypothetically propagates from OLG to OLG leading to the spreading of GCI pathology. Given that the uptake of extracellularly-applied misfolded α-syn is not usually observed in normal OLGs, the entry of misfolded α-syn into oligodendroglial cells is mediated through an unidentified mechanism (a-c). Once the misfolded α-syn (pre-GCI) enters oligodendroglial cells, the pre-GCI self-assembles through the interaction with non-misfolded α-syn, resulting in the formation of perinuclear fibrillary structure (mature GCIs). The non-misfolded α-syn may be derived from OLGs or neurons (d, e)
Comparison of human α-syn overexpression mouse models
| Promotor | CNP | MBP* | PLP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phosphorylated α-syn aggregates in OLGs | ++ | ++ | ++ |
| Neuronal loss | |||
| Striatonigral system | – | ++** | ++ |
| Olivopontocerebellar system | ND | ND | – |
| Spinal cord | + | – | ++*** |
| Demyelination | + | ++ | – |
| Microglial activation | ND | ++ | ++ |
| Phenotype | |||
| Motor | ++ | ++ | + |
| Non-motor | – | ND | ++ |
| Reference | [ | [ | [ |
The results of immunohistochemical and phenotypic analysis of each MSA mouse model are highlighted.
++, present within 12 months of age; +, present after 12 months of age; −, not clearly observed; ND, not described. *, moderate expresser line; **, not significant in substantia nigra; ***, mainly parasympathetic outflow