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α-Synuclein propagates from mouse brain to grafted dopaminergic neurons and seeds aggregation in cultured human cells

  • Christian Hansen
  • , Elodie Angot
  • , Ann Louise Bergström
  • , Jennifer A. Steiner
  • , Laura Pieri
  • , Gesine Paul
  • , Tiago F. Outeiro
  • , Ronald Melki
  • , Pekka Kallunki
  • , Karina Fog
  • , Jia Yi Li
  • , Patrik Brundin
  • Wallenberg Neuroscience Center
  • H. Lundbeck A/S
  • Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionelle et Evolutive, CNRS
  • Instituto de Medicina Molecular
  • University of Lisbon

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Post-mortem analyses of brains from patients with Parkinson disease who received fetal mesencephalic transplants show that α-synuclein-containing (α-syn-containing) Lewy bodies gradually appear in grafted neurons. Here, we explored whether intercellular transfer of α-syn from host to graft, followed by seeding of α-syn aggregation in recipient neurons, can contribute to this phenomenon. We assessed α-syn cell-to-cell transfer using microscopy, flow cytometry, and high-content screening in several coculture model systems. Coculturing cells engineered to express either GFP- or DsRed-tagged α-syn resulted in a gradual increase in double-labeled cells. Importantly, α-syn-GFP derived from 1 neuroblastoma cell line localized to red fluorescent aggregates in other cells expressing DsRed-α-syn, suggesting a seeding effect of transmitted α-syn. Extracellular α-syn was taken up by cells through endocytosis and interacted with intracellular α-syn. Next, following intracortical injection of recombinant α-syn in rats, we found neuronal uptake was attenuated by coinjection of an endocytosis inhibitor. Finally, we demonstrated in vivo transfer of α-syn between host cells and grafted dopaminergic neurons in mice overexpressing human α-syn. In summary, intercellularly transferred α-syn interacts with cytoplasmic α-syn and can propagate α-syn pathology. These results suggest that α-syn propagation is a key element in the progression of Parkinson disease pathology.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Clinical Investigation
Volume121
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)715-725
Number of pages11
ISSN0021-9738
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2011
Externally publishedYes

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