Abstract

Synucleinopathies are a group of neurodegenerative disorders associated with the formation of aberrant amyloid inclusions composed of the normally soluble presynaptic protein α-synuclein (α-syn). Parkinson disease is the most well known of these disorders because it bears α-syn pathological inclusions known as Lewy bodies (LBs). Mutations in the gene for α-syn, including the E46K missense mutation, are sufficient to cause Parkinson disease as well as other synucleinopathies like dementia with LBs. Herein, we describe transgenic mice expressing E46K human α-syn in CNS neurons that develop detrimental age-dependent motor impairments. These animals accumulate age-dependent intracytoplasmic neuronal α-syn inclusions that parallel disease and recapitulate the biochemical, histological, and morphological properties of LBs. Surprisingly, the morphology of α-syn inclusions in E46K human α-syn transgenic mice more closely resemble LBs than the previously described transgenic mice (line M83) that express neuronal A53T human α-syn. E46K human α-syn mice also develop abundant neuronal tau inclusions that resemble neurofibrillary tangles. Subsequent studies on the ability of E46K α-syn to induce tau inclusions in cellular models suggest that both direct and indirect mechanisms of protein aggregation are probably involved in the formation of the tau inclusions observed here in vivo. Re-evaluation of presymptomatic transgenic mice expressing A53T human α-syn reveals that the formation of α-syn inclusions in mice must be synchronized; however, inclusion formation is diffuse within affected areas of the neuroaxis such that there was no clustering of inclusions. Collectively, these findings provide insights in the mechanisms of formation of these aberrant proteinaceous inclusions and support the notion that α-syn aggregates are involved in the pathogenesis of human diseases.

Highlights

  • Synucleinopathies are a group of neurodegenerative disorders associated with the formation of amyloid inclusions composed of the normally soluble presynaptic protein ␣-synuclein

  • The expression levels of the transgenes were similar in the cortex and spinal cord, their relative levels of overexpression compared with native mouse ␣-syn were much higher in the spinal cord than in the cortex (Fig. 1, B and C)

  • In affected A53T and E46K human ␣-syn transgenic mice, there was a significant accumulation of radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA)-insoluble (i.e. SDS/urea-soluble) ␣-syn hyperphosphorylated at Ser-129 in the spinal cord but not in the cortex (Fig. 6, A and B), coinciding with the presence of ␣-syn inclusions observed by light microscopy in these brain regions

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Summary

Background

Synucleinopathies are a group of neurodegenerative disorders associated with the formation of amyloid inclusions composed of the normally soluble presynaptic protein ␣-synuclein. Synucleinopathies are a group of neurodegenerative disorders associated with the formation of aberrant amyloid inclusions composed of the normally soluble presynaptic protein ␣-synuclein (␣-syn). Mutations in the gene for ␣-syn, including the E46K missense mutation, are sufficient to cause Parkinson disease as well as other synucleinopathies like dementia with LBs. we describe transgenic mice expressing E46K human ␣-syn in CNS neurons that develop detrimental age-dependent motor impairments. Synucleinopathies are a group of neurodegenerative diseases associated with neuronal, and in some cases oligodendritic, amyloid inclusions composed of the presynaptic protein ␣-synuclein (␣-syn)3 [1,2,3,4]. We describe two ␣-syn transgenic lines that express E46K human ␣-syn and that develop a detrimental motor phenotype associated with the formation of Lewy-like pathology and tau pathological inclusions

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