Abstract

ABSTRACTIn recent years, several studies have investigated the potential of immunohistochemical detection of α‐synuclein in the gastrointestinal tract to diagnose Parkinson's disease (PD). Although methodological heterogeneity has hindered comparability between studies, it has become increasingly apparent that the high sensitivity and specificity reported in preliminary studies has not been sustained in subsequent large‐scale studies. What constitutes pathological α‐synuclein in the alimentary canal that could distinguish between PD patients and controls and how this can be reliably detected represent key outstanding questions in the field. In this review, we will comment on and compare the variable technical aspects from previous studies, and by highlighting some advantages and shortcomings we hope to delineate a standardized approach to facilitate the consensus criteria urgently needed in the field. Furthermore, we will describe alternative detection techniques to conventional immunohistochemistry that have recently emerged and may facilitate ease of interpretation and reliability of gastrointestinal α‐synuclein detection. Such techniques have the potential to detect the presence of pathological α‐synuclein and include the paraffin‐embedded tissue blot, the proximity ligation assay, the protein misfolding cyclic amplification technique, and the real‐time quaking‐induced conversion assay. Finally, we will review 2 nonsynonymous theories that have driven enteric α‐synuclein research, namely, (1) that α‐synuclein propagates in a prion‐like fashion from the peripheral nervous system to the brain via vagal connections and (2) that gastrointestinal α‐synuclein deposition may be used as a clinically useful biomarker in PD. © 2016 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Highlights

  • Idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative condition characterized by typical motor symptoms of tremor, bradykinesia, and rigidity, which enable

  • In PD and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) brain, the ASN-paraffinembedded tissue (PET) blot has revealed numerous synaptic ASN microaggregates in cortical and subcortical gray matter in addition to a relatively sparse number of Lewy bodies (LBs) seen with conventional IHC.[30]

  • The accumulation of ASN in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV), generally considered to be the first vulnerable region of the central nervous system (CNS) to become affected in PD, may originate in the enteric nervous system (ENS), where vagal fibers synapse with parasympathetic ganglionic neurons.[18,58]

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Summary

RUFFMANN AND PARKKINEN

PD biomarker have since added to the growing body of literature.[7,8,9,10] These have provided new evidence that GI ASN detection may facilitate a presymptomatic diagnosis of PD, with evidence of ASN accumulation in colonic biopsies up to 8 years prior to the development of motor symptoms,[7,11] which suggests that ASN accumulation may start in the ENS long before it affects the brain. A critical step in this process will be to develop a method that is sufficiently sensitive and specific To date, both the use of different types of antibodies and morphological assessment of pathology have fallen short of accurately distinguishing between the physiological and pathological forms of the ASN protein. Two studies have reported in vivo ASN-IRS exclusively in neurologically unimpaired subjects.[9,13] In the most recent of these, Gray and colleagues reported somatic, diffuse ASN-IRS in the appendices of 20 of 20 neurologically unimpaired subjects and abundant neuritic and synaptic ASN-IRS in the lamina propria with an apicobasal gradient of increasing fiber density.[9] It is unlikely that prodromal PD underlies the ASN-IRS in all neurologically unimpaired subjects described in these studies; these findings raise concerns about the use of colonic biopsies to diagnose PD

Biopsy Sampling
Colonic submucosa
Detection of Pathologic Species of ASN in the ENS
Alternative Techniques
Proximity Ligation Assay
Neuronal marker
What Kind of Biomarker Could Enteric ASN Be?
Findings
Conclusions and Future Work
Full Text
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