Evaluation of blood flow as a route for propagation in experimental synucleinopathy

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2021.105255Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • In Parkinson's disease, the bloodstream may act as a route for long-distance transmission of pathological α-synuclein.

  • We tested the hypothesis of α-synuclein spreading via blood flow.

  • Mice circulatory systems were joined by parabiosis, while one received an intranigral injection of α-synuclein aggregates.

  • In the patient-derived α-synuclein aggregates-injected mouse model, the disease is not “transmitted” through the bloodstream.

Abstract

In Parkinson's disease, synucleinopathy is hypothesized to spread from the enteric nervous system, via the vagus nerve, to the central nervous system. Recent evidences collected in non-human primates challenge however the hypothesis of a transmission of α-synuclein (α-syn) pathology through the vagus nerve. Would the hypothesis whereby the bloodstream acts as a route for long-distance transmission of pathological α-syn hold true, an inter-individual transmission of synucleinopathy could occur via blood contact. Here, we used a parabiosis approach to join the circulatory systems of wild type and GFP transgenic C57BL/6 J mice, for which one of the partners parabiont received a stereotaxic intranigral injection of patient-derived α-syn aggregates. While the Lewy Body-receiving mice exhibited a loss of dopamine neurons and an increase in nigral S129 phosphorylated α-syn immunoreactivity, their parabiotic bloodstream-sharing partners did not show any trend for a lesion or change in S129 phosphorylated-α-syn levels. Altogether, our study suggests that, in the patient-derived α-synuclein aggregates-injected mouse model and within the selected time frame, the disease is not “transmitted” through the bloodstream.

Keywords

Lewy body
α-Synuclein
Parabiosis
Pathology
Animal model

Abbreviations

DAB
3,3’-Diaminobenzidin
ELISA
Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay
FACS
Fluorescence activated cell sorting
GFP
Green fluorescence protein
LB
Lewy body
OD
Optical density
PBS
Phosphate buffer saline
PD
Parkinson's disease
PFA
Paraformaldehyde
SN
Substantia nigra
TH
Tyrosine hydroxylase
WT
Wild type

Cited by (0)

1

Equal contribution.