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  • Specific immune modulation of experimental colitis drives enteric alpha-synuclein accumulation and triggers age-related Parkinson-like brain pathology.

Specific immune modulation of experimental colitis drives enteric alpha-synuclein accumulation and triggers age-related Parkinson-like brain pathology.

Free neuropathology (2021-05-18)
Stefan Grathwohl, Emmanuel Quansah, Nazia Maroof, Jennifer A Steiner, Liz Spycher, Fethalla Benmansour, Gonzalo Duran-Pacheco, Juliane Siebourg-Polster, Krisztina Oroszlan-Szovik, Helga Remy, Markus Haenggi, Marc Stawiski, Matthias Selhausen, Pierre Mailver, Andreas Wolfert, Thomas Emrich, Zachary Madaj, Arel Su, Martha L Escobar Galvis, Christoph Mueller, Annika Herrmann, Patrik Brundin, Markus Britschgi
ABSTRACT

Background: In some people with Parkinson's disease (PD), α-synuclein (αSyn) accumulation may begin in the enteric nervous system (ENS) decades before development of brain pathology and disease diagnosis. Objective: To determine how different types and severity of intestinal inflammation could trigger αSyn accumulation in the ENS and the subsequent development of αSyn brain pathology. Methods: We assessed the effects of modulating short- and long-term experimental colitis on αSyn accumulation in the gut of αSyn transgenic and wild type mice by immunostaining and gene expression analysis. To determine the long-term effect on the brain, we induced dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) colitis in young αSyn transgenic mice and aged them under normal conditions up to 9 or 21 months before tissue analyses. Results: A single strong or sustained mild DSS colitis triggered αSyn accumulation in the submucosal plexus of wild type and αSyn transgenic mice, while short-term mild DSS colitis or inflammation induced by lipopolysaccharide did not have such an effect. Genetic and pharmacological modulation of macrophage-associated pathways modulated the severity of enteric αSyn. Remarkably, experimental colitis at three months of age exacerbated the accumulation of aggregated phospho-Serine 129 αSyn in the midbrain (including the substantia nigra), in 21- but not 9-month-old αSyn transgenic mice. This increase in midbrain αSyn accumulation is accompanied by the loss of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive nigral neurons. Conclusions: Our data suggest that specific types and severity of intestinal inflammation, mediated by monocyte/macrophage signaling, could play a critical role in the initiation and progression of PD.

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Anti-Tyrosine Hydroxylase Rabbit pAb, liquid, Calbiochem®