| Literature DB >> 34975412 |
Iris-Stefania Pasniceanu1, Manpreet Singh Atwal1, Cleide Dos Santos Souza1, Laura Ferraiuolo1, Matthew R Livesey1.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are characterized by degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons and neurons of the prefrontal cortex. The emergence of the C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion mutation as the leading genetic cause of ALS and FTD has led to a progressive understanding of the multiple cellular pathways leading to neuronal degeneration. Disturbances in neuronal function represent a major subset of these mechanisms and because such functional perturbations precede degeneration, it is likely that impaired neuronal function in ALS/FTD plays an active role in pathogenesis. This is supported by the fact that ALS/FTD patients consistently present with neurophysiological impairments prior to any apparent degeneration. In this review we summarize how the discovery of the C9ORF72 repeat expansion mutation has contributed to the current understanding of neuronal dysfunction in ALS/FTD. Here, we discuss the impact of the repeat expansion on neuronal function in relation to intrinsic excitability, synaptic, network and ion channel properties, highlighting evidence of conserved and divergent pathophysiological impacts between cortical and motor neurons and the influence of non-neuronal cells. We further highlight the emerging association between these dysfunctional properties with molecular mechanisms of the C9ORF72 mutation that appear to include roles for both, haploinsufficiency of the C9ORF72 protein and aberrantly generated dipeptide repeat protein species. Finally, we suggest that relating key pathological observations in C9ORF72 repeat expansion ALS/FTD patients to the mechanistic impact of the C9ORF72 repeat expansion on neuronal function will lead to an improved understanding of how neurophysiological dysfunction impacts upon pathogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis); C9ORF72; FTD (frontotemporal dementia); excitability; glutamate; neuron; physiology; synaptic
Year: 2021 PMID: 34975412 PMCID: PMC8715728 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2021.784833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
FIGURE 1Mechanisms of neurophysiological impairments in the cortex and lower motor neurons in C9ORF72RE ALS. In humans, upper motor neurons (blue) descend from the motor cortex and project onto the brainstem and spinal cord via the corticospinal tract. These corticospinal neurons form a monosynaptic pathway (in primates and humans) that innervates lower motor neurons (orange), which in turn transmit motor signals to effector muscles. Together this forms the motor circuitry within humans. Neurophysiological impairments leading to ALS can arise in the corticospinal tract at various loci. In ALS, cortical dysfunction ranges from hyperexcitability (increased excitability) as a result of increased excitatory signaling or reduced inhibition, disruption of synaptic vesicle dynamics and impaired synaptic plasticity that also extends to cortico-hippocampal connections. Within the corticospinal tract, upper motor neurons are vulnerable to synaptic loss and dendrite pathology including loss of dendritic spines that may arise from increased hyperexcitability. In a feedforward mechanism of dysfunction, degeneration of lower motor neurons is mediated, at least in part, via glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity whereby, cortical dysfunction precedes that of lower motor neurons, potentially causing further neurophysiological impairments and injury in lower motor neurons.
Summary of physiological studies that have implication for the C9ORF72RE in cortical dysfunction.
| Cortical neurons | Study | Physiological finding | Link to | Method of investigation | Model |
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| Altered gene expression in synaptic signaling processes | Transcriptomics | |||
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| Decreased synaptic density associated with cognitive decline | Electron microscopy and array tomography | |||
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| Reduced synaptic (mEPSC) frequency | Poly-GR (80 repeat) DPRs | Patch-clamp electrophysiology (mEPSC recordings) | DPR mouse model | |
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| Reduced synaptic vesicle-associated protein 2 (SV2) Altered calcium homeostasis and impaired vesicle release | Poly-GA (149 repeat) DPRs | Calcium imaging FM dye vesicular imaging; Synaptic protein puncta | Primary rat cortical neurons | |
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| Increased network burst activity; increased synaptic density; impaired synaptic potentiation; reduced vesicular pool | Electrophysiology Transcriptomics; Synaptic staining | |||
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| Disease modifier mediated decrease of SV2 and synaptophysin | Immunostaining |
The table describes the main physiological findings of the study, whether they are associated with a mechanism of C9ORF72
Summary of physiological studies that have implication for the C9ORF72RE in lower motor neuron dysfunction.
| Lower motor neurons | Study | Physiological finding | Link to C9ORF72RE | Method of investigation | Model |
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| Increased susceptibility to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity | Toxic RNA gain-of-function | Transcriptomics; Excitotoxicity assay | ||
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| Intrinsic hypoexcitability | Patch-clamp electrophysiology | |||
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| Hyperexcitability and pharmacological rescue using Kv7 channel activator | Multielectrode array and patch-clamp electrophysiology; Pharmacological rescue | |||
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| Initial intrinsic hyperexcitability, followed by hypoexcitability and loss of synaptic activity | Patch-clamp electrophysiology | |||
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| Impaired synaptic release at the neuromuscular junction | Disruption of normal RNA processing | Patch-clamp electrophysiology | ||
| Reduction in active zones number | (C4G2)30
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| Impaired synaptic release at the neuromuscular junction | Disruption of normal RNA processing | Neuronal phenotype analysis | (C4G2)58
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| Reduction in active zones number | |||||
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| Impaired synaptic plasticity at the neuromuscular junction | Poly-GR (100 repeat) DPRs | Patch-clamp electrophysiology | ||
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| Increased extracellular glutamate and intracellular Ca2+ levels | Poly-GR/PR (36 repeat) DPRs | Glutamate and calcium imaging | ||
| Increased in NMDA receptor mediated signaling | |||||
| Increase of synaptic boutons and active zones in larval neuromuscular junctions | |||||
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| Increased susceptibility to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity | C9ORF72 haploinsufficiency | Excitotoxicity; Pharmacological rescue; Immunostaining; Biochemical (Western blot, qPCR) | ||
| Increased functional expression of calcium permeable AMPAR | |||||
| Upregulation of NMDA receptor subunit GluN1 | |||||
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| Increased susceptibility to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity | Patch-clamp electrophysiology; BaseScope Assay; Biochemical (Western blot, qPCR) | |||
| Increased GluA1 AMPA subunit expression | |||||
| Increased functional expression of calcium permeable AMPAR | |||||
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| Increased susceptibility to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity | Calcium imaging | |||
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| Increased GluA1 AMPA subunit expression selective to motor neurons, not cortical neurons | BaseScope | |||
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| Astrocyte-mediated hypoexcitability | Patch-clamp electrophysiology; Transcriptomics | |||
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| Hypoexcitability driven loss of excitatory synapses through a CREB-dependent signaling pathway | Transcriptomics; Proteomics; Optogenetics Pharamcological rescue | |||
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| Manipulating SK ion channel activity improves C9ORF72-ALS motor neuron death and Drosophila locomotor deficits | Transcriptomics; Pharmacological rescue | |||
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| Reduction in the number of presynaptic and postsynaptic structures at the NMJ | C9ORF72 haploinsufficiency | Patch clamp electrophysiology; | ||
| Mass spectrometry |
The table describes the main physiological findings of the study, whether they are associated with a mechanism of C9ORF72
Summary of the main physiological observations that are associated with ALS.
| Physiological observation | Evidence in non- | Evidence in |
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| Established as a hallmark observation in ALS, including sporadic (reviewed | Motor cortical hyperexcitability evidenced in |
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| Hippocampal synaptic plasticity was evidenced in murine models: | Patient synaptic/network plasticity observations are present in presymptomatic disease stages ( |
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| Increase in synaptic input and intrinsic excitability in murine models of SOD1 | Elevated network burst activity and enhanced synaptic input was found in iPSC-derived |
| Increased synaptic input of excitatory cortical neurons was evidenced in the motor cortex of pre-symptomatic mutant | ||
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| Decreased in synaptic input in ALS post-mortem tissue ( | Synaptic loss was found to correlate with cognitive decline ( |
| TDP-43 mouse model shows intrinsic hyperexcitability and decreased excitatory synaptic inputs ( | Hippocampal regions of 3-month-old | |
| Symptomatic | ||
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| Axonal hyperexcitability and decreased function with symptomatic onset was reported in sporadic ALS patients ( | Increased axonal excitability has been highlighted in symptomatic |
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| Evidence of early hyperexcitability was seen in mSOD1 models (reviewed in | Evidence of hyperexcitability at early stages of motor neuron differentiation ( |
| Shifting excitability in mutant SOD1 mice motor neurons that display a period of early hyperexcitability before hypoexcitability ( | Increased excitability via pharmacological inhibition of small conductance calcium-activated potassium (SK) channels promotes survival and restores the activity-dependent transcriptional profiles and synaptic composition in iPSC-derived | |
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| Synaptic changes in ALS models reviewed in | Decreased synaptic activity and spontaneous post-synaptic current activity was evidenced in iPSC-derived |
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| mTDP-43 | |
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| mSOD1 patients and models exhibit vulnerability to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity ( | |
| GluA1 dysregulation is evidenced in mutant TDP-43 motor neurons ( | ||
The table details the prominent pathophysiological concepts that are thought to play a role in the pathogenesis of ALS; for example, cortical hyperexcitability and glutamate dysfunction in lower motor neurons. We summarize papers that provide data in non-C9ORF72