| Literature DB >> 32317654 |
Birger V Dieriks1,2, Maurice A Curtis3,4, Taylor J Stevenson1,2, Helen C Murray1,2, Clinton Turner2,5, Richard L M Faull1,2.
Abstract
Reduced olfactory function (hyposmia) is one of the most common non-motor symptoms experienced by those living with Parkinson's disease (PD), however, the underlying pathology of the dysfunction is unclear. Recent evidence indicates that α-synuclein (α-syn) pathology accumulates in the anterior olfactory nucleus of the olfactory bulb years before the motor symptoms are present. It is well established that neuronal cells in the olfactory bulb are affected by α-syn, but the involvement of other non-neuronal cell types is unknown. The occurrence of intracellular α-syn inclusions were quantified in four non-neuronal cell types - microglia, pericytes, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes as well as neurons in the anterior olfactory nucleus of post-mortem human PD olfactory bulbs (n = 11) and normal olfactory bulbs (n = 11). In the anterior olfactory nucleus, α-syn inclusions were confirmed to be intracellular in three of the four non-neuronal cell types, where 7.78% of microglia, 3.14% of pericytes and 1.97% of astrocytes were affected. Neurons containing α-syn inclusions comprised 8.60% of the total neuron population. Oligodendrocytes did not contain α-syn. The data provides evidence that non-neuronal cells in the PD olfactory bulb contain α-syn inclusions, suggesting that they may play an important role in the progression of PD.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32317654 PMCID: PMC7174302 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-63412-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Immunofluorescence image of a sagittal section from a human PD OFB stained with antibodies for PGP9.5, CNPase, NeuN, UEA-1, and a Hoechst counterstain to identify the AON regions. Phosphorylated α-syn (s129) antibody was used for the distribution of α-syn. (b) Illustration of the PD OFB and tract displaying the distribution of α-syn, highlighting that most of the α-syn inclusions are in the multiple AON regions. (c) Inset of AON 1 showing representative immunofluorescence images used to identify the AON region. The AON is characterized by a decreased density of cells represented with Hoechst staining, increased PGP9.5 immunoreactivity, a lack of CNPase immunoreactivity and increased density of large NeuN-positive cells. In PD OFBs, the increased abundance of α-syn can be used to identify the AON. Scale bar, 1 mm (a) and 500 µm (c). Graphs showing (d) area fraction of α-syn (%) inside versus outside of the AON of human PD OFBs (n = 11) and (e) area fraction of α-syn (%) inside versus outside of the AON by case. Data presented as mean ± SD. # p < 0.0001, * p < 0.05.
Figure 2Representative confocal immunofluorescence images with orthogonal views of different cell types containing α-syn in the AON of human PD OFBs. Small intracellular α-syn inclusions were found in (a) microglia, (b) pericytes and (c) astrocytes. No intracellular α-syn was found in (d) oligodendrocytes. Neurons either contained (e) small α-syn inclusions or (f) large Lewy body like inclusions. Yellow arrows indicate α-syn inclusions that are intracellular. White arrows indicate α-syn inclusions that are extracellular. Scale bar, 10 µm.
Figure 3Graphs showing (a) Percentage of cells with intracellular α-syn in the AON of PD OFBs (n = 11), where, 7.78% ± 5.22% of microglia, 3.41% ± 2.74% of pericytes, 1.97% ± 1.17% of astrocytes and 0% of oligodendrocytes contained intracellular α-syn. Whereas, 2.25% ± 2.41% of neurons contained small α-syn inclusions, 6.38% ± 6.83% of neurons contained Lewy bodies, giving a total of 8.68% ± 9.34% α-syn containing neurons overall. (b) Number of cells with intracellular α-syn in the AON/mm2 (n = 11), microglia (14.02 ± 10.23 cells/mm2), astrocytes (5.09 ± 3.55 cells/mm2), pericytes (4.93 ± 3.60 cells/mm2) and oligodendrocytes (0 cells /mm2). Neurons either contained small α-syn inclusions (8.84 ± 8.56 cells/mm2) or Lewy bodies (24.10 ± 25.25 cells/mm2) comprising a total number of neurons (32.49 ± 33.69 cells/mm2) containing intracellular α-syn. Data presented as mean ± SD.
Human OFB cases used in this study.
| Normal cases | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case number | Age | Sex | Post-mortem delay (hours) | Cause of death | |
| OFB51 | 85 | M | 20 | Carbon monoxide poisoning | |
| OFB55 | 56 | M | 35 | Myocardial infarction | |
| OFB57 | 63 | F | 36 | Effects of diabetes | |
| OFB58 | 60 | M | 36 | Asphyxia | |
| OFB59 | 67 | M | 20 | Complication of surgery | |
| H190 | 72 | F | 19 | Myocardial infarction | |
| H240 | 73 | M | 26.5 | Ruptured aneurysm | |
| H243 | 77 | F | 13 | Ischaemic heart disease | |
| H245 | 63 | M | 20 | Asphyxia | |
| H246 | 89 | M | 17 | Myocardial infarction | |
| H250 | 93 | F | 19 | Pneumonia | |
| Average | 73 (Range: 56–93) | 7:4 (M:F) | 24 (Range: 13–36) | ||
| PD52 | 84 | M | 5 | Myocardial infarction | 12 |
| PD53 | 79 | F | 25 | Renal failure | 9 |
| PD54 | 78 | M | 6 | Aspiration pneumonia | 19 |
| PD56 | 74 | M | 10.5 | End stage Lewy body disease | 12 |
| PD58 | 82 | F | 18 | — | 15 |
| PD63 | 91 | F | 5 | Parkinson’s disease | 22 |
| PD65 | 67 | M | 2.25 | Parkinson’s disease | 9 |
| PD66 | 73 | M | 17.5 | Aspiration pneumonia | 22 |
| PD67 | 65 | M | 17 | Pneumonia | 12 |
| PD77 | 76 | F | 6.5 | Abdominal carcinoma | 23 |
| PD79 | 77 | M | 6.5 | End stage Lewy body disease | 22 |
| Average | 77 (Range: 65–84) | 7:4 (M:F) | 11 (Range: 5–25) | 16 (Range: 9–23) | |
Primary and secondary antibodies used for immunohistochemistry.
| Primary Antibodies | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | Species | Dilution | Catalogue # | Manufacturer |
| α-synuclein (phospho s129) | Mouse | 1:3,000 | ab184674 | Abcam |
| α-synuclein (phospho s129) | Rabbit | 1:4,000 | ab190628 | Abcam |
| PDGFR-β [Y92] | Rabbit | 1:200 | ab32570 | Abcam |
| GFAP | Chicken | 1:4,000 | ab4674 | Abcam |
| Iba-1 | Chicken | 1:250 | ab139590 | Abcam |
| NeuN | Chicken | 1:500 | MABN91 | EMD Millipore |
| PGP9.5 | Mouse | 1:1,000 | ab8189 | Abcam |
| UEA-1 | — | 1:500 | DL-1067 | Vector Laboratories |
| CNPase | Mouse | 1:500 | sc166558 | Santa Cruz Biotechnology |
| Goat anti – mouse (488) | 1:400 | A11029 | Thermofisher Scientific | |
| Goat anti – rabbit (594) | 1:400 | A11037 | Thermofisher Scientific | |
| Goat anti – chicken (647) | 1:400 | A21449 | Thermofisher Scientific | |
| Strepavidin – (647) | 1:500 | S21374 | Thermofisher Scientific | |