| Literature DB >> 33113845 |
Giada Cipollina1, Arash Davari Serej1, Gianluca Di Nolfi1, Andrea Gazzano1, Andrea Marsala1, Mauro G Spatafora1, Marco Peviani1.
Abstract
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a complex pathology: (i) the neurodegeneration is chronic and progressive; it starts focally in specific central nervous system (CNS) areas and spreads to different districts; (ii) multiple cell types further than motor neurons (i.e., glial/immune system cells) are actively involved in the disease; (iii) both neurosupportive and neurotoxic neuroinflammatory responses were identified. Microglia cells (a key player of neuroinflammation in the CNS) attracted great interest as potential target cell population that could be modulated to counteract disease progression, at least in preclinical ALS models. However, the heterogeneous/multifaceted microglia cell responses occurring in different CNS districts during the disease represent a hurdle for clinical translation of single-drug therapies. To address this issue, over the past ten years, several studies attempted to dissect the complexity of microglia responses in ALS. In this review, we shall summarize these results highlighting how the heterogeneous signature displayed by ALS microglia reflects not only the extent of neuronal demise in different regions of the CNS, but also variable engagement in the attempts to cope with the neuronal damage. We shall discuss novel avenues opened by the advent of single-cell and spatial transcriptomics technologies, underlining the potential for discovery of novel therapeutic targets, as well as more specific diagnostic/prognostic not-invasive markers of neuroinflammation.Entities:
Keywords: PET; microglia; neuroinflammation; single-cell RNAseq; spatial transcriptomics
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33113845 PMCID: PMC7662281 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21217923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a complex pathology. There is variability in the extent of neuronal demise in different central nervous system (CNS) districts affected by the disease. This leads to heterogeneity of neuroinflammatory (microglia) responses, characterized by variable engagement in the attempt to cope with neuronal demise.
Figure 2Strategies to investigate the complex microglia signature in ALS include single-cell and spatial transcriptomics approaches or multi-omics techniques such as cytofluorometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF). These will allow to identify novel targets that could be exploited therapeutically or for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)/positron emission tomography (PET) imaging studies.
(a) Gene-signature of homeostatic microglia; (b) gene signature of ALS microglia; (c) gene signature induced by LPS stimulation.
| (a) Homeostatic microglia | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene | Species | CNS Regions Analyzed | Validation Methods | References |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR, IHC, FACS | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR, IHC, FACS | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR, IHC, FACS | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq, IHC, FACS | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RT-qPCR, RNA-seq | [ | |
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| SC | Microarray, RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | ||
| SC | Microarray, RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | ||
| Lumbar SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, RT-qPCR, IHC, FACS | [ | ||
| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | ||
| Brain and SC | Microarray, RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | ||
| SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR, IHC | [ | ||
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| SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| SC | RNA-seq, RT-qPCR | [ | |
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| SC | RNA-seq, Microarray | [ | |
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, RT-qPCR, ST | [ | |
| Cervical and lumbar SC | ST | [ | ||
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, ST | [ | |
| SC | ST | [ | ||
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, ST | [ | |
| Cervical and lumbar SC | ST | [ | ||
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq, ST | [ | |
| Cervical and lumbar SC | ST | [ | ||
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain & SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | |
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| SC | RNA-seq, scRNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain and SC | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| Brain | RNA-seq | [ | |
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| M. musculus (C57BL6) | Brain | RT-qPCR | [ |
* = disease-associated microglia (DAM)-like gene signature; scRNA-seq = single-cell RNA-seq; ST = spatial transcriptomics; IHC = immunohistochemistry; FACS = fluorescence activated cell sorting; SC = spinal cord.
Pet tracers of neuroinflammation.
| Tracer and Radioisotope | Target | Tested in | Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [11C]-(R)-PK11195 | TSPO | human ALS patients and healthy controls | signals are not influenced by patient’s TSPO genotype | [ |
| rat model of cerebral ischemia (Wistar rats) | poor specificity | |||
| [18F]DPA-714 | TSPO | ALS model (SOD1G93A mouse) | signals correlate to increased TSPO expression and compromised brain regions | [ |
| rat model of cerebral ischemia (Wistar rats) | higher affinity and better signal-to-noise ratio than PK11195 | |||
| [11C]-PBR28 | TSPO | human ALS, PLS patients and healthy controls | signals correlate to glial activation and inflammation | [ |
| human healthy subjects | binding is affected by TSPO polymorphism | |||
| [11C]A-836339 | CB2 | neuroinflammation-induced/AD models (CD-1 and APPswe/PS1ΔE9 mouse) | first CB2 radiotracer tested | [ |
| AD model (APPswe/PS1ΔE9 mouse) | detection of neuroinflammation very early in the pathology | |||
| [11C]NE40 | CB2 | AD, PD patients and healthy controls | no differences between disease and control cases | [ |
| ischemic stroke model (Sprague–Dawley rat) | signal in peri-infarct area, concomitant to CB2 up-regulation | |||
| senescence-accelerated model (SAMP10 mouse) | detection of early signs of neuroinflammation in cortex | |||
| [11C]KD2 | CB2 | ALS patients | selective binding in post-mortem ALS spinal cord specimens | [ |
| neuroinflammation-induced model (CD-1 mouse) | limited target specificity and excessive lipophilicity | |||
| [11C]RS-016 | CB2 | neuroinflammation-induced model (CD-1 mouse) | high blood stability and CB2 specificity | [ |
| ALS patients | selective binding in post-mortem ALS spinal cord specimens | |||
| [18F]29 | CB2 | neuroinflammation-induced model (CD-1 mouse) | CB2 specific tracing but very rapid metabolism | [ |
| [18F]3 | CB2 | Wistar rats | rapid washout from brain tissue | [ |
| ALS patients and healthy controls | selective binding in post-mortem ALS spinal cord specimens | |||
| [11C]GSK1482160 | P2X7 | neuroinflammation-induced model (C57BL6) | increased signals in CNS sites with prominent neuroinflammation | [ |