| Literature DB >> 33094283 |
Koy Chong Ng Kee Kwong1, Jenna M Gregory1,2,3,4,5, Suvankar Pal1,3,6, Siddharthan Chandran1,2,3,6,7, Arpan R Mehta1,2,3,6,8.
Abstract
Various studies have suggested that a neurotoxic cerebrospinal fluid profile could be implicated in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Here, we systematically review the evidence for cerebrospinal fluid cytotoxicity in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and explore its clinical correlates. We searched the following databases with no restrictions on publication date: PubMed, Embase and Web of Science. All studies that investigated cytotoxicity in vitro following exposure to cerebrospinal fluid from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients were considered for inclusion. Meta-analysis could not be performed, and findings were instead narratively summarized. Twenty-eight studies were included in our analysis. Both participant characteristics and study conditions including cerebrospinal fluid concentration, exposure time and culture model varied considerably across studies. Of 22 studies assessing cell viability relative to controls, 19 studies reported a significant decrease following exposure to cerebrospinal fluid from patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, while three early studies failed to observe any difference. Seven of eight studies evaluating apoptosis observed significant increases in the levels of apoptotic markers following exposure to cerebrospinal fluid from patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, with the remaining study reporting a qualitative difference. Although five studies investigated the possible relationship between cerebrospinal fluid cytotoxicity and patient characteristics, such as age, gender and disease duration, none demonstrated an association with any of the factors. In conclusion, our analysis suggests that cerebrospinal fluid cytotoxicity is a feature of sporadic and possibly also of familial forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Further research is, however, required to better characterize its underlying mechanisms and to establish its possible contribution to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis pathophysiology.Entities:
Keywords: ALS; CSF; cytotoxicity; in vitro; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 33094283 PMCID: PMC7566327 DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaa121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Commun ISSN: 2632-1297
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram. Chart describes each stage of the study selection process. *Quantitative analysis could not be performed due to outcome measures required to calculate appropriate summary statistics not commonly being reported by included studies. Results were also interpreted differently across studies, and thus could not be pooled together.
Study characteristics of included studies
| Author/s (year of publication) | Country | ALS patient population | Control subjects | Study groups | CSF concentration (v/v%) |
| Exposure time | Culture model | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| USA | 10 patients with ALS |
7 neuromuscular control patients (NC) 2 non-neuromuscular control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF - Untreated cells | 50, 75 | Culture medium | 8 days | Rat spinal cord culture | 4 |
|
| Italy | 3 patients with sporadic ALS | 4 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 24 h | Human fetal motor cortex culture | 5 |
|
| USA | 4 patients with ALS | None |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Untreated cells | 1.25, 2.5, 5, 10, 37.5 | Culture medium | 21 days | Rat spinal motor neuron culture | 4 |
| Couratier | France | 10 patients with ALS |
10 neurodegenerative control patients (NC) 10 non-neurodegenerative control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10, 20, 50 | MEM Earle’s salts (+) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 5 |
|
| France | 8 patients with ALS | 8 non-neurodegenerative control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF - Untreated cells | 50 | MEM Earle’s salts (+) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 5 |
|
| Japan | 10 patients with ALS |
10 neurodegenerative control patients (NC) 10 non-neurodegenerative control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF | 10, 25, 50 | DMEM (+) | 8 days | Rat spinal cord culture | 5 |
|
| France | 7 patients with ALS | 7 non-neurodegenerative control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF - Untreated cells | 20 | HBSS (+) | 48 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 5 |
|
| USA |
13 sporadic ALS patients with high CSF HNE levels 14 sporadic ALS patients with low CSF HNE levels | None |
- Cells exposed to high HNE ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to low HNE ALS–CSF | 1, 10 | Culture medium | 48 h | VSC 4.1 cell line | 7 |
|
| Finland |
5 ALS patients homozygous for the D90A CuZn-SOD mutation 5 patients with familial ALS 16 patients with sporadic ALS | 24 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to D90A ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to fALS–CSF - Cells exposed to sALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 25 | DMEM (+) | 24 h | Rat spinal cord culture | 8 |
| Sen | India |
10 patients with ALS | 10 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | Eagle’s MEM (+) | 24 h | Rat spinal cord culture | 7 |
|
| Germany | 12 patients with sporadic ALS | 6 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | L-15 medium (+) | 24 h | Chick motor neuron culture and chick mixed spinal cord culture | 5 |
| Shobha | India | 5 patients with ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (−) | 48 h | Rat mixed spinal cord culture | 7 |
|
| India | 5 patients with sporadic ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 7 |
|
| Argentina | 6 patients with sporadic ALS | 3 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 50 | Locke’s solution (−) | 24 h | Mouse cortical neuron culture | 7 |
|
| UK | 10 patients with ALS | 10 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 20, 50 |
Neurobasal medium (−) | 24 h | Rat motor neuron culture | 8 |
| Kulshreshtha | India | 6 patients with ALS | 6 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 7 |
|
| India | 5 patients with sporadic ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 6 |
|
| Spain | 27 patients with ALS | 14 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | Neurobasal medium (−) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 8 |
|
| India | 16 patients with ALS | 13 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 8 |
| Gomez-Pinedo | Spain | 3 patients with ALS | 3 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | Neurobasal medium (−) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 7 |
| Yáñez | Spain | 17 patients with ALS | None |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | Neurobasal medium (−) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 4 |
|
| China |
18 patients with sporadic ALS 8 patients with sporadic ALS and FTD | 15 non-neurological control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to ALS–FTD–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF | 30 | DMEM (+) | 21 days | U251 cell line | 8 |
| Sharma | India | 10 patients with ALS | 10 control patients (Con) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to Con–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 8 |
| Vijayalakshmi | India | 5 patients with sporadic ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 7 |
| Galán | Spain | 31 patients with ALS | None |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | Neurobasal medium (−) | 24 h | Rat cortical neuron culture | 7 |
| Shruthi | India | 5 patients with ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) | - Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 7 |
|
| India | 5 patients with sporadic ALS | 5 neurological control patients (NC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (−) | 48 h | hESC-derived motor neuron culture | 7 |
|
| Japan |
10 patients with sporadic ALS 1 patient with familial SOD1–ALS |
15 neurodegenerative control patients (NC) 11 non-neurodegenerative control patients (NNC) |
- Cells exposed to ALS–CSF - Cells exposed to NC–CSF - Cells exposed to NNC–CSF - Untreated cells | 10 | DMEM (+) | 48 h | NSC-34 cell line | 8 |
Serum presence and serum-free conditions are indicated in brackets as ‘+’ and ‘−’, respectively.
DMEM: Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium; fALS: familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; FTD: frontotemporal dementia; HBSS: Hanks’ balanced salt solution; hESC: human embryonic stem cell; HNE: 4‐hydroxynonenal; MEM: Minimal Essential Medium; NSC-34: mouse spinal cord-neuroblastoma hybrid cell line; SOD1: superoxide dismutase 1; U251: human glioma cell line; VSC 4.1: cholinergic cAMP-differentiated motor neuron-neuroblastoma hybrid cell line.
Summary of findings of included studies
| Author/s (year of publication) | Outcome/s assessed | Assay/s for assessing outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Cell viability | NSE radioimmunoassay | Little evidence for toxic effect of CSF suggested by slight decrease (∼9%) in enolase activity of CSF-treated cultures (ALS and disease controls) compared with untreated cultures |
|
| Cell viability | NS | No obvious decrease in neuronal survival following exposure to ALS–CSF at 24 h. Neuronal cell loss only observed at day 5, with the decrease becoming significant at day 10 |
|
| Cell viability | NS | No change in motor neuron survival observed following exposure by ALS–CSF |
| Couratier | Cell viability | Cell counting | Significant decrease in neuronal survival following exposure to 50% ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | Cell counting, FDA staining | Significant decrease in neuronal survival following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | Cell counting | No significant differences in neuronal survival following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls at any CSF concentration |
|
| Cell viability | Cell counting, FDA and PI double staining | Significant decrease in neuronal survival following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | Trypan blue staining, MTS assay | Significant difference in VSC 4.1 cell survival between samples exposed to high HNE ALS–CSF and low HNE ALS–CSF both at 1% CSF and 10% CSF ( |
|
| Cell viability, apoptosis | Cell counting, bis-benzimide staining | Significant increase in the proportion of apoptotic neurons and significant decrease in the percentage of surviving neurons following exposure to D90A ALS–CSF, fALS–CSF and sALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Sen | Cell viability | Live/dead cell assay (calcein-AM and ethidium homodimer) | Significant decrease in both motor neuron survival and survival of other spinal neurons following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability, apoptosis | Cell counting, trypan blue staining, PI/DAPI staining, TUNEL assay | Significant increase in apoptotic cells and significant decrease in motor neuron survival following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Shobha | Cell viability | LDH assay | Increased LDH activity following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | MTT assay, LDH assay | Significant reduction in viability of NSC-34 cells ( |
|
| Cell viability | Cell counting, trypan blue staining | Significant decrease in neuronal survival following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | Cell counting | Significant decrease in motor neuron survival following exposure to 50% ALS–CSF ( |
| Kulshreshtha | Cell viability | LDH assay | Significant increase in LDH activity following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Apoptosis | TUNEL assay | TUNEL-positive nuclei observed in cells exposed to ALS–CSF while cells in control groups showed unstained nuclei |
|
| Cell viability | MTT assay, LDH assay | Significant decrease in neuronal viability ( |
|
| Cell viability | MTT assay, LDH assay | Significant decrease in cell viability and significant increase in LDH activity following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Gomez-Pinedo | Apoptosis | Caspase-3 assay | Significant increase in caspase-3 positive cells following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Yáñez | Cell viability | MTT assay | Significant decrease in neuronal viability following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to control ( |
|
| Apoptosis | Caspase-3 assay, Bcl-2 assay | Significant increase in cleaved caspase-3 levels following exposure to ALS–CSF ( |
| Sharma | Cell viability | MTT assay | Significant decrease in neuronal viability following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Vijayalakshmi | Apoptosis | TUNEL assay, caspase-3 assay | Significant increase in proportion of TUNEL-positive cells and expression of caspase-3 following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
| Galán | Cell viability | MTT assay | CSF cytotoxicity was observed in 21 patients (67.7%) while the remaining 10 patients (32.3%) were considered to possess non-cytotoxic CSF (cytotoxicity was defined as a decrease in neuronal viability greater or equal to 25% compared to control) |
| Shruthi | Cell viability, apoptosis | MTT assay, caspase-3 assay | Significant decrease in cell viability ( |
|
| Cell viability, apoptosis | MTT assay, LDH assay, caspase-9 assay, Bcl-2 assay, Bax assay | Significant decrease in neuronal viability and significant increase in LDH activity following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
|
| Cell viability | Cell Counting Kit-8 | Significant decrease in cell viability following exposure to ALS–CSF compared to controls ( |
DAPI: 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenyindole, diacetate; fALS: familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; FDA: fluorescein diacetate; FTD: frontotemporal dementia; HNE: 4‐hydroxynonenal; LDH: lactate dehydrogenase; MTT: 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide; NS: not specified; NSC-34: mouse spinal cord-neuroblastoma hybrid cell line; NSE: neuron-specific enolase; PI: propidium iodide; sALS: sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; TUNEL: terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labelling; VSC 4.1: cholinergic cAMP-differentiated motor neuron-neuroblastoma hybrid cell line.
Clinical correlates of ALS–CSF cytotoxicity
| Author/s (year of publication) | Patient characteristic | Results |
|---|---|---|
|
| Survival time | Little correlation observed between CSF cytotoxicity and patient survival time. Considerably lower apoptotic activity was, however, observed in the two patients with the longest survival times |
|
| Age, disease duration | Little correlation observed between CSF cytotoxicity and age ( |
|
| Age, gender, disease duration | Little correlation observed between CSF cytotoxicity and age or disease duration. CSF cytotoxicity was also not influenced by gender |
|
| Age, gender, disease duration, disease severity, site of onset | Although female patients, younger patients and patients with bulbar onset ALS appeared to possess more cytotoxic CSF, the differences did not reach statistical significance. No relationship was also observed between CSF cytotoxicity and disease duration or disease severity |
| Galán | Age, gender, disease duration, survival time, site of onset | No significant differences were observed between patients with cytotoxic CSF and those with non-cytotoxic CSF with respect to age, gender, disease duration, survival time or site of onset |