Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.
Brain. 2021 Jul 28;144(6):1853-1868. doi: 10.1093/brain/awab061.
Neuronal aggregates of misfolded alpha-synuclein protein are found in the brain and periphery of patients with Parkinson's disease. Braak and colleagues have hypothesized that the initial formation of misfolded alpha-synuclein may start in the gut, and then spread to the brain via peripheral autonomic nerves hereby affecting several organs, including the heart and intestine. Age is considered the greatest risk factor for Parkinson's disease, but the effect of age on the formation of pathology and its propagation has not been studied in detail. We aimed to investigate whether propagation of alpha-synuclein pathology from the gut to the brain is more efficient in old versus young wild-type rats, upon gastrointestinal injection of aggregated alpha-synuclein. Our results demonstrate a robust age-dependent gut-to-brain and brain-to-gut spread of alpha-synuclein pathology along the sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves, resulting in age-dependent dysfunction of the heart and stomach, as observed in patients with Parkinson's disease. Moreover, alpha-synuclein pathology is more densely packed and resistant to enzymatic digestion in old rats, indicating an age-dependent maturation of alpha-synuclein aggregates. Our study is the first to provide a detailed investigation of alpha-synuclein pathology in several organs within one animal model, including the brain, skin, heart, intestine, spinal cord and autonomic ganglia. Taken together, our findings suggest that age is a crucial factor for alpha-synuclein aggregation and complete propagation to heart, stomach and skin, similar to patients. Given that age is the greatest risk factor for human Parkinson's disease, it seems likely that older experimental animals will yield the most relevant and reliable findings. These results have important implications for future research to optimize diagnostics and therapeutics in Parkinson's disease and other age-associated synucleinopathies. Increased emphasis should be placed on using aged animals in preclinical studies and to elucidate the nature of age-dependent interactions.
神经细胞聚集的错误折叠的α-突触核蛋白在帕金森病患者的大脑和外周组织中被发现。Braak 和同事假设,错误折叠的α-突触核蛋白的初始形成可能从肠道开始,然后通过外周自主神经传播到大脑,从而影响包括心脏和肠道在内的多个器官。年龄被认为是帕金森病最大的风险因素,但年龄对病理学形成及其传播的影响尚未得到详细研究。我们旨在研究在胃肠道注射聚集的α-突触核蛋白后,α-突触核蛋白病理学是否从肠道向大脑传播的效率在老年和年轻野生型大鼠中更高。我们的结果表明,α-突触核蛋白病理学沿着交感和副交感神经具有明显的年龄依赖性从肠道到大脑以及从大脑到肠道的传播,导致心脏和胃的年龄依赖性功能障碍,正如帕金森病患者中观察到的那样。此外,α-突触核蛋白病理学在老年大鼠中更密集地堆积且对酶消化具有抗性,表明α-突触核蛋白聚集物的年龄依赖性成熟。我们的研究首次在一个动物模型中对包括大脑、皮肤、心脏、肠道、脊髓和自主神经节在内的几个器官中的α-突触核蛋白病理学进行了详细研究。总之,我们的发现表明,年龄是α-突触核蛋白聚集和完全传播到心脏、胃和皮肤的关键因素,与患者相似。鉴于年龄是人类帕金森病最大的风险因素,年龄较大的实验动物似乎更有可能产生最相关和可靠的发现。这些结果对未来的研究具有重要意义,有助于优化帕金森病和其他与年龄相关的突触核蛋白病的诊断和治疗。在临床前研究中,应更加重视使用老年动物,并阐明年龄依赖性相互作用的性质。