Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Oxford Medical School, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Ann Neurol. 2017 Aug;82(2):259-270. doi: 10.1002/ana.24997. Epub 2017 Aug 19.
Neuronal loss, a key substrate of irreversible disability in multiple sclerosis (MS), is a recognized feature of MS cortical pathology of which the cause remains unknown. Fibrin(ogen) deposition is neurotoxic in animal models of MS, but has not been evaluated in human progressive MS cortex. The aim of this study was to investigate the extent and distribution of fibrin(ogen) in progressive MS cortex and elucidate its relationship with neurodegeneration.
A postmortem cohort of pathologically confirmed MS (n = 47) and control (n = 10) cases was used. The extent and distribution of fibrin(ogen) was assessed and related to measures of demyelination, inflammation, and neuronal density. In a subset of cases (MS, n = 20; control, n = 10), expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), a key enzyme in the fibrinolytic cascade, was assessed and related to the extent of fibrin(ogen).
Motor cortical fibrin(ogen) deposition was significantly over-represented in MS compared to control cases in all compartments studied (ie, extracellular [p = 0.001], cell body [p = 0.003], and neuritic/glial-processes [p = 0.004]). MS cases with high levels of extracellular fibrin(ogen) had significantly upregulated PAI-1 expression in all cortical layers assessed (p < 0.05) and reduced neuronal density (p = 0.017), including in the functionally-relevant layer 5 (p = 0.001).
For the first time, we provide unequivocal evidence that fibrin(ogen) is extensively deposited in progressive MS motor cortex, where regulation of fibrinolysis appears perturbed. Progressive MS cases with severe fibrin(ogen) deposition have significantly reduced neuronal density. Future studies are needed to elucidate the provenance and putative neurotoxicity of fibrin(ogen), and its potential impact on clinical disability. Ann Neurol 2017;82:259-270.
神经元丧失是多发性硬化症(MS)不可逆残疾的关键底物,是 MS 皮质病理学的公认特征,但其原因仍不清楚。纤维蛋白(原)沉积在 MS 的动物模型中具有神经毒性,但尚未在人类进展性 MS 皮质中进行评估。本研究旨在调查纤维蛋白(原)在进展性 MS 皮质中的程度和分布,并阐明其与神经退行性变的关系。
使用经病理证实的 MS(n=47)和对照(n=10)病例的死后队列。评估纤维蛋白(原)的程度和分布,并与脱髓鞘、炎症和神经元密度的测量值相关。在病例亚组(MS,n=20;对照,n=10)中,评估了纤溶酶原激活物抑制剂 1(PAI-1)的表达,这是纤维溶酶级联反应中的关键酶,并与纤维蛋白(原)的程度相关。
与对照病例相比,MS 患者的运动皮质纤维蛋白(原)沉积在所有研究的隔室中均显著增加(即细胞外[ p=0.001]、细胞体[ p=0.003]和神经原/神经胶质突起[ p=0.004])。MS 病例中细胞外纤维蛋白(原)水平较高的患者在评估的所有皮质层中均表现出 PAI-1 表达显著上调(p<0.05)和神经元密度降低(p=0.017),包括功能相关的第 5 层(p=0.001)。
我们首次提供了确凿的证据表明纤维蛋白(原)广泛沉积在进展性 MS 运动皮质中,纤溶的调节似乎受到干扰。纤维蛋白(原)沉积严重的进展性 MS 病例的神经元密度显著降低。未来需要进一步研究阐明纤维蛋白(原)的来源和潜在神经毒性及其对临床残疾的潜在影响。Ann Neurol 2017;82:259-270。