Brain region-specific susceptibility of Lewy body pathology in synucleinopathies is governed by α-synuclein conformations

Author:

de Boni Laura,Watson Aurelia Hays,Zaccagnini Ludovica,Wallis Amber,Zhelcheska Kristina,Kim Nora,Sanderson John,Jiang Haiyang,Martin Elodie,Cantlon Adam,Rovere Matteo,Liu Lei,Sylvester Marc,Lashley Tammaryn,Dettmer Ulf,Jaunmuktane Zane,Bartels TimORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe protein α-synuclein, a key player in Parkinson’s disease (PD) and other synucleinopathies, exists in different physiological conformations: cytosolic unfolded aggregation-prone monomers and helical aggregation-resistant multimers. It has been shown that familial PD-associated missense mutations within the α-synuclein gene destabilize the conformer equilibrium of physiologic α-synuclein in favor of unfolded monomers. Here, we characterized the relative levels of unfolded and helical forms of cytosolic α-synuclein in post-mortem human brain tissue and showed that the equilibrium of α-synuclein conformations is destabilized in sporadic PD and DLB patients. This disturbed equilibrium is decreased in a brain region-specific manner in patient samples pointing toward a possible “prion-like” propagation of the underlying pathology and forms distinct disease-specific patterns in the two different synucleinopathies. We are also able to show that a destabilization of multimers mechanistically leads to increased levels of insoluble, pathological α-synuclein, while pharmacological stabilization of multimers leads to a “prion-like” aggregation resistance. Together, our findings suggest that these disease-specific patterns of α-synuclein multimer destabilization in sporadic PD and DLB are caused by both regional neuronal vulnerability and “prion-like” aggregation transmission enabled by the destabilization of local endogenous α-synuclein protein.

Funder

Dementia Research Institute, UK

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Parkinson’s Disease Foundation Stanley Fahn Award

Eisai Pharmaceutical postdoctoral programme

Chan Zuckerberg Collaborative Pairs Initiative

Thiemann Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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