Amorim Inês S, Mitchell Nadia L, Palmer David N, Sawiak Stephen J, Mason Roger, Wishart Thomas M, Gillingwater Thomas H
Centre for Integrative Physiology University of Edinburgh Hugh Robson Building Edinburgh UK ; Euan MacDonald Centre for Motor Neurone Disease Research University of Edinburgh Hugh Robson Building Edinburgh UK.
Department of Molecular Biosciences Faculty of Agricultural and Life Sciences and Batten Animal Research Network Lincoln University Christchurch New Zealand.
Brain Behav. 2015 Oct 9;5(11):e00401. doi: 10.1002/brb3.401. eCollection 2015 Nov.
Synapses represent a major pathological target across a broad range of neurodegenerative conditions. Recent studies addressing molecular mechanisms regulating synaptic vulnerability and degeneration have relied heavily on invertebrate and mouse models. Whether similar molecular neuropathological changes underpin synaptic breakdown in large animal models and in human patients with neurodegenerative disease remains unclear. We therefore investigated whether molecular regulators of synaptic pathophysiology, previously identified in Drosophila and mouse models, are similarly present and modified in the brain of sheep with CLN5 Batten disease.
Gross neuropathological analysis of CLN5 Batten disease sheep and controls was used alongside postmortem MRI imaging to identify affected brain regions. Synaptosome preparations were then generated and quantitative fluorescent Western blotting used to determine and compare levels of synaptic proteins.
The cortex was particularly affected by regional neurodegeneration and synaptic loss in CLN5 sheep, whilst the cerebellum was relatively spared. Quantitative assessment of the protein content of synaptosome preparations revealed significant changes in levels of seven out of eight synaptic neurodegeneration proteins investigated in the motor cortex, but not cerebellum, of CLN5 sheep (α-synuclein, CSP-α, neurofascin, ROCK2, calretinin, SIRT2, and UBR4).
Synaptic pathology is a robust correlate of region-specific neurodegeneration in the brain of CLN5 sheep, driven by molecular pathways similar to those reported in Drosophila and rodent models. Thus, large animal models, such as sheep, represent ideal translational systems to develop and test therapeutics aimed at delaying or halting synaptic pathology for a range of human neurodegenerative conditions.
突触是多种神经退行性疾病的主要病理靶点。最近关于调节突触易损性和退化的分子机制的研究严重依赖于无脊椎动物和小鼠模型。在大型动物模型和神经退行性疾病人类患者中,类似的分子神经病理学变化是否是突触破坏的基础仍不清楚。因此,我们研究了先前在果蝇和小鼠模型中鉴定出的突触病理生理学分子调节因子在患有CLN5型贝敦氏病的绵羊大脑中是否同样存在并发生改变。
对患有CLN5型贝敦氏病的绵羊和对照进行大体神经病理学分析,并结合死后MRI成像来确定受影响的脑区。然后制备突触体,并使用定量荧光免疫印迹法来测定和比较突触蛋白的水平。
CLN5型绵羊的大脑皮质特别受到局部神经退行性变和突触丢失的影响,而小脑相对未受影响。对突触体制备物中蛋白质含量的定量评估显示,在CLN5型绵羊的运动皮质而非小脑中,所研究的八种突触神经退行性变蛋白中有七种的水平发生了显著变化(α-突触核蛋白、CSP-α、神经束蛋白、ROCK2、钙视网膜蛋白、SIRT2和UBR4)。
突触病理学与CLN5型绵羊大脑中区域特异性神经退行性变密切相关,其驱动分子途径与果蝇和啮齿动物模型中报道的相似。因此,大型动物模型,如绵羊,是开发和测试旨在延缓或阻止一系列人类神经退行性疾病突触病理学的治疗方法的理想转化系统。