Abstract

IntroductionRecent histopathological studies have shown that neurodegenerative processes in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease develop along neuronal networks and that hallmarks could propagate trans-synaptically through neuronal pathways. The underlying molecular mechanisms are still unknown, and investigations have been impeded by the complexity of brain connectivity and the need for experimental models allowing a fine manipulation of the local microenvironment at the subcellular level.ResultsIn this study, we have grown primary cortical mouse neurons in microfluidic (μFD) devices to separate soma from axonal projections in fluidically isolated microenvironments, and applied β-amyloid (Aβ) peptides locally to the different cellular compartments. We observed that Aβ application to the somato-dendritic compartment triggers a “dying-back” process, involving caspase and NAD+ signalling pathways, whereas exposure of the axonal/distal compartment to Aβ deposits did not induce axonal degeneration. In contrast, co-treatment with somatic sub-toxic glutamate and axonal Aβ peptide triggered axonal degeneration. To study the consequences of such subcellular/local Aβ stress at the network level we developed new μFD multi-chamber devices containing funnel-shaped micro-channels which force unidirectional axon growth and used them to recreate in vitro an oriented cortico-hippocampal pathway. Aβ application to the cortical somato-dendritic chamber leads to a rapid cortical pre-synaptic loss. This happens concomitantly with a post-synaptic hippocampal tau-phosphorylation which could be prevented by the NMDA-receptor antagonist, MK-801, before any sign of axonal and somato-dendritic cortical alteration.ConclusionThanks to μFD-based reconstructed neuronal networks we evaluated the distant effects of local Aβ stress on neuronal subcompartments and networks. Our data indicates that distant neurotransmission modifications actively take part in the early steps of the abnormal mechanisms leading to pathology progression independently of local Aβ production. This offers new tools to decipher mechanisms underlying Braak's staging. Our data suggests that local Aβ can play a role in remote tauopathy by distant disturbance of neurotransmission, providing a putative mechanism underlying the spatiotemporal appearance of pretangles.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40478-014-0145-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Recent histopathological studies have shown that neurodegenerative processes in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease develop along neuronal networks and that hallmarks could propagate trans-synaptically through neuronal pathways

  • Somato-dendritic exposure of cortical neurons to Aβ-peptide induces an axonal dying back pattern We wondered whether localized β-amyloid deposition on different subcellular compartments lead to local degenerative signals or to a global neuronal degeneration

  • While somato-dentritic application of aggregated Aβ did not affect somatic and dendritic viability (MAP2, red; DAPI, blue; Figure 1c) some local synaptic damage was evidenced in the somatic chamber (MAP2, blue; Vglut1, red; Additional file 1: Figure S1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Recent histopathological studies have shown that neurodegenerative processes in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease develop along neuronal networks and that hallmarks could propagate trans-synaptically through neuronal pathways. Histopathological studies show that these hallmarks spread, each in their own stereotyped fashion, within specific regions of the brain during disease evolution [1,2] This progression follows neuro-anatomical pathways and could be the sign of nexopathy-related processes [3]. Since neurons are highly polarized, this raises the question whether local Aβ and Tau protein abnormalities in the vicinity of different neuronal subparts (somatic, dendritic, axonal) lead to local degenerative processes or could initiate distant dysfunction within neurons or even within neuronal networks, through (trans-) synaptic alterations. Though various mechanisms initiating local primary dysfunctions have been described, the molecular or structural reasons underlying distant breakdown of specific networks and the relationship between amyloid and Tau pathology are still unclear

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