| Literature DB >> 33829010 |
Michele Perni1, Annemieke van der Goot2, Ryan Limbocker1,3, Tjakko J van Ham4, Francesco A Aprile1, Catherine K Xu1, Patrick Flagmeier1, Karen Thijssen2, Pietro Sormanni1, Giuliana Fusco1, Serene W Chen1, Pavan K Challa1, Julius B Kirkegaard5, Romain F Laine6, Kai Yu Ma1,2, Martin B D Müller1,2, Tessa Sinnige1, Janet R Kumita1, Samuel I A Cohen1, Renée Seinstra2, Gabriele S Kaminski Schierle7, Clemens F Kaminski7, Denise Barbut8, Alfonso De Simone9, Tuomas P J Knowles1, Michael Zasloff8, Ellen A A Nollen2, Michele Vendruscolo1, Christopher M Dobson1.
Abstract
The aggregation of α-synuclein is a hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD) and a variety of related neurological disorders. A number of mutations in this protein, including A30P and A53T, are associated with familial forms of the disease. Patients carrying the A30P mutation typically exhibit a similar age of onset and symptoms as sporadic PD, while those carrying the A53T mutation generally have an earlier age of onset and an accelerated progression. We report two C. elegans models of PD (PDA30P and PDA53T), which express these mutational variants in the muscle cells, and probed their behavior relative to animals expressing the wild-type protein (PDWT). PDA30P worms showed a reduced speed of movement and an increased paralysis rate, control worms, but no change in the frequency of body bends. By contrast, in PDA53T worms both speed and frequency of body bends were significantly decreased, and paralysis rate was increased. α-Synuclein was also observed to be less well localized into aggregates in PDA30P worms compared to PDA53T and PDWT worms, and amyloid-like features were evident later in the life of the animals, despite comparable levels of expression of α-synuclein. Furthermore, squalamine, a natural product currently in clinical trials for treating symptomatic aspects of PD, was found to reduce significantly the aggregation of α-synuclein and its associated toxicity in PDA53T and PDWT worms, but had less marked effects in PDA30P. In addition, using an antibody that targets the N-terminal region of α-synuclein, we observed a suppression of toxicity in PDA30P, PDA53T and PDWT worms. These results illustrate the use of these two C. elegans models in fundamental and applied PD research.Entities:
Keywords: C. elegans; Parkinson's disease; alpha-synuclein; drug discovery; neurodegenerative diseases; protein aggregation; protein misfolding; transgenic model
Year: 2021 PMID: 33829010 PMCID: PMC8019828 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.552549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Figure 1Behavioral characterization of the PDA30P and PDA53T worm strains. (A) Three common readouts of worm fitness were investigated for each strain using an automated worm tracking procedure (Perni et al., 2017b). The results are presented with a behavioral time-course map of PDA30P and PDA53T worms over 14 days of adulthood. The speed of movement, number of body bends per minute (BPMs), and the rate of paralysis were followed during aging; data are normalized with respect to day 1 to illustrate the progressive decline in all readouts. PD worms overexpressing wild-type α-syn:YFP in the body-wall muscle cells (PDWT) were used as a positive control, while worms expressing only YFP were used as negative healthy controls (Control). Shadowed areas represent standard errors of the mean (SEM). (B) The rate of body bends, speed and paralysis rate were combined into a single score of total fitness and evaluated during the duration of the experiment. For each experiment, about 1,000 worms were analyzed and each experiment was carried out in triplicate; one representative experiment of three experiments is shown. At each time point, the mutant worms exhibited lower fitness (p < 0.0005) when compared to healthy worms; error bars represent the standard error of the mean (SEM); the statistical significance was assessed using the 2-way ANOVA method with Dunnett's multiple comparison test.
Figure 2Age-dependent formation of inclusions in PDA30P and PDA53T worms. (A) Schematic description of the lifespan of C. elegans. Days 6 and 12 of adulthood are reported here as representative for the formation of α-syn inclusions in vivo. (B) Quantification of the number of α-syn inclusions in PDA30P and PDA53T worms, compared to PDWT worms (Van Ham et al., 2008). (C) PDA30P and PDA53T amyloid-like aggregation profiles measured using TG-FLIM (Laine et al., 2019), (left) day 6 and (right) day 12. The average fluorescence lifetime (in ps) was measured for PDA30P (blue) and PDA53T (green) worms, and compared to control worms (gray) and PDWT worms (red) (Van Ham et al., 2008), and to Q40 (pink) polyglutamine worms, which have a high propensity to form amyloid-like aggregates (Morley et al., 2002). The FLIM analysis shows no amyloid-like features in the α-syn inclusions in PDA30P worms at day 6 of adulthood, unlike PDA53T, PDWT and Q40 worms. A statistically significant increase in amyloid-like aggregation was observed in all the strains after day 12 of adulthood (insets) (p < 0.05). For each experiment, 25 worms were analyzed. (D) Representative images showing the inclusion profile in PDA30P and PDA53T worms and compared to PDWT worms and YFP controls at day 6 and 12 (Van Ham et al., 2008).
Figure 3Effects of squalamine on the formation of α-syn inclusions and the fitness of PDA30P and PDA53T worms. (A) Behavioral time-course map reporting thee rate of body bends, swimming speed and paralysis rate for PDA30P and PDA53T worms exposed to 10 μM squalamine. (B) Calculation of the total fitness corresponding to the three readouts in (A) (Perni et al., 2017b, 2018b). The effects of squalamine on control worms were negligible (Perni et al., 2017b), and only a small protective effect could be observed in PDA30P, while strong protective effects were observed in PDA53T worms consistently with the effects on the PDWT worms (Perni et al., 2017b). Each experiment was carried out in triplicate, and about 1,000 worms were analyzed in each replicate; one representative experiment of the three is shown. (C) Quantification of the number of inclusions in PDA30P and PDA53T worms with or without squalamine; squalamine reduced significantly the number of inclusions in PDA53T worms **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001 and ****P ≤ 0.0001. (D) Representative images showing a substantial decrease in the number of α-syn inclusions in the presence of squalamine in PDA53T worms. In order to show the inclusions more clearly, the image focus on only the heads of the worms, although the quantification was carried out using the whole worms. This result is consistent with previous observations for PDWT worms (Perni et al., 2017b). In the YFP worms, the expression pattern is not significantly affected while in PDA30P worms the number of inclusions appears mildly reduced. All measurements were carried out at day 12 of adulthood.
Figure 4Comparison of the effects of the antibody and squalamine administration to PDA30P and PDA53T worms. (A,B) At a concentration of 10 μM, the antibody rescues the motility dysfunction (relative speed) induced by the over-expression of A30P, with squalamine having a slightly smaller effect. The worm motility is also rescued in the A53T worms by the antibody and squalamine to similar extents. Errors represent the standard error on the mean (SEM) *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001 and ****P ≤ 0.0001. (C,D) Paralysis rate, reported as the fraction of worms that are mobile, corresponding to the time points shown in (A,B); the variability between biological replicates is in the 2–9% range, and the variability between technical replicates is in the 1–4% range. (E,F) Number of inclusions at day 12 of adulthood *P ≤ 0.05, ***P ≤ 0.001 and ****P ≤ 0.0001. The scale bar indicates 80 μm.