Publication

Towards elucidating the structural and cellular determinants of a-synuclein seeding and toxicity

Somanath Jagannath
2022
EPFL thesis
Abstract

Although it has been nearly two and half decades since the discovery of alpha-synuclein (aSyn) as the major component of Lewy bodies (LBs), our understanding of the involvement of different aSyn species, their seeding, spreading and toxicity in Parkinson's disease (PD) is limited. One of the major causes underlying this knowledge gap is the unavailability of adequate tools, techniques, and model systems to capture, monitor, and evaluate the role of different aSyn species in the disease process. In addition, our understanding of cell-type specific contributions to disease pathogenesis is limited. In this thesis, we systematically address the current knowledge gaps and elucidate the structural and cellular determinants of aSyn seeding and toxicity using cellular and animal model systems of PD. In the first chapter of this thesis, we describe an antibody characterization and validation pipeline to assess the specificity of antibodies to well-characterized preparations of various aSyn species, including monomers, fibrils, and different type of oligomers. Using an array of techniques, we demonstrate that that: i) none of the antibodies tested are specific for one particular type of aSyn species, including monomers, oligomers or fibrils; ii) all antibodies that were reported to be oligomer-specific also recognized fibrillar aSyn; and iii) a few antibodies (e.g., the antibody clone 26F1, 5G4) showed high specificity for oligomers and fibrils but did not bind to monomers. These findings suggest that most aSyn aggregate-specific antibodies cannot be used to differentiate between oligomers and fibrils, thus highlighting the importance of exercising caution when interpreting results obtained using these antibodies. In the second chapter of this thesis, we systematically addressed the current knowledge gaps on the role of aSyn oligomers in the initiation, seeding and pathology spreading. Towards this goal, we used different biophysical approaches to investigate aSyn seeding in vitro and in neurons and animal models of aSyn seeding and pathology spreading. we observed that oligomeric forms do not form in the PFF-based neuronal seeding model and we report that different types of oligomers do not seed pathology in vitro and primary hippocampal neurons, and their presence slows rather than accelerates aSyn fibrillization. Altogether, our work points to fibrils as the most seeding competent species and suggests that they are the critical mediators of pathology spreading in PD and other synucleinopathies.In the third chapter of this thesis, we used single-nuclei RNA-sequencing to investigate transcriptional changes in different cell types of the amygdala brain region, which is highly susceptible to developing pS129 positive aggregates in the PD brains. We identified that most of the top 100 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) are of neuronal rather than non-neuronal cell types. In addition, we report that the gene expression profile of a handful of PD risk genes such as Sncaip, Park7, Maob, Hspa8, Scl2a3 and Hsf3 and some pathways that have been associated with PD are differentially altered in specific cell types. Our study highlights the involvement of unique gene expression changes and their associated pathways in different cell types in driving the disease process at an early stage in a PFF-based mouse model of PD.

About this result
This page is automatically generated and may contain information that is not correct, complete, up-to-date, or relevant to your search query. The same applies to every other page on this website. Please make sure to verify the information with EPFL's official sources.
Related concepts (34)
Regulation of gene expression
Regulation of gene expression, or gene regulation, includes a wide range of mechanisms that are used by cells to increase or decrease the production of specific gene products (protein or RNA). Sophisticated programs of gene expression are widely observed in biology, for example to trigger developmental pathways, respond to environmental stimuli, or adapt to new food sources. Virtually any step of gene expression can be modulated, from transcriptional initiation, to RNA processing, and to the post-translational modification of a protein.
Neuron
Within a nervous system, a neuron, neurone, or nerve cell is an electrically excitable cell that fires electric signals called action potentials across a neural network. Neurons communicate with other cells via synapses - specialized connections that commonly use minute amounts of chemical neurotransmitters to pass the electric signal from the presynaptic neuron to the target cell through the synaptic gap. The neuron is the main component of nervous tissue in all animals except sponges and placozoa.
Lewy body
Lewy bodies are the inclusion bodies – abnormal aggregations of protein – that develop inside nerve cells affected by Parkinson's disease (PD), the Lewy body dementias (Parkinson's disease dementia and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)), and some other disorders. They are also seen in cases of multiple system atrophy, particularly the parkinsonian variant (MSA-P). Lewy bodies appear as spherical masses in the cytoplasm that displace other cell components. For instance, some Lewy bodies tend to displace the nucleus to one side of the cell.
Show more
Related publications (46)

Multimodal transcriptomic atlases of mouse spinal cord injury

Matthieu Pierre Gautier

A spinal cord injury (SCI) triggers a cascade of molecular and cellular responses involving inflammatory cell infiltration and cytokine release, apoptosis, demyelination, excitotoxicity, ischemia, and the formation of a fibrotic scar surrounded by an astro ...
EPFL2024

The dynamic genetic determinants of increased transcriptional divergence in spermatids

Christina Ernst

Cis-genetic effects are key determinants of transcriptional divergence in discrete tissues and cell types. However, how cis- and trans-effects act across continuous trajectories of cellular differentiation in vivo is poorly understood. Here, we quantify al ...
Berlin2024

Toward universal cell embeddings: integrating single-cell RNA-seq datasets across species with SATURN

Maria Brbic, Ziang Li

Analysis of single-cell datasets generated from diverse organisms offers unprecedented opportunities to unravel fundamental evolutionary processes of conservation and diversification of cell types. However, interspecies genomic differences limit the joint ...
Berlin2024
Show more
Related MOOCs (32)
Neuroscience Reconstructed: Cell Biology
This course will provide the fundamental knowledge in neuroscience required to understand how the brain is organised and how function at multiple scales is integrated to give rise to cognition and beh
Neuroscience Reconstructed: Cell Biology
This course will provide the fundamental knowledge in neuroscience required to understand how the brain is organised and how function at multiple scales is integrated to give rise to cognition and beh
Neuroscience Reconstructed: Genetics and Brain Development
This course will provide the fundamental knowledge in neuroscience required to understand how the brain is organised and how function at multiple scales is integrated to give rise to cognition and beh
Show more

Graph Chatbot

Chat with Graph Search

Ask any question about EPFL courses, lectures, exercises, research, news, etc. or try the example questions below.

DISCLAIMER: The Graph Chatbot is not programmed to provide explicit or categorical answers to your questions. Rather, it transforms your questions into API requests that are distributed across the various IT services officially administered by EPFL. Its purpose is solely to collect and recommend relevant references to content that you can explore to help you answer your questions.