Abstract

The distinct neuropathological features of the different α-Synucleinopathies, as well as the diversity of the α-Synuclein (α-Syn) intracellular inclusion bodies observed in post mortem brain sections, are thought to reflect the strain diversity characterizing invasive α-Syn amyloids. However, this “one strain, one disease” view is still hypothetical, and to date, a possible disease-specific contribution of non-amyloid factors has not been ruled out. In Multiple System Atrophy (MSA), the buildup of α-Syn inclusions in oligodendrocytes seems to result from the terminal storage of α-Syn amyloid aggregates first pre-assembled in neurons. This assembly occurs at the level of neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, and even earlier, within neuronal intranuclear inclusions (NIIs). Intriguingly, α-Syn NIIs are never observed in α-Synucleinopathies other than MSA, suggesting that these inclusions originate (i) from the unique molecular properties of the α-Syn fibril strains encountered in this disease, or alternatively, (ii) from other factors specifically dysregulated in MSA and driving the intranuclear fibrillization of α-Syn. We report the isolation and structural characterization of a synthetic human α-Syn fibril strain uniquely capable of seeding α-Syn fibrillization inside the nuclear compartment. In primary mouse cortical neurons, this strain provokes the buildup of NIIs with a remarkable morphology reminiscent of cat’s eye marbles (see video abstract). These α-Syn inclusions form giant patterns made of one, two, or three lentiform beams that span the whole intranuclear volume, pushing apart the chromatin. The input fibrils are no longer detectable inside the NIIs, where they become dominated by the aggregation of endogenous α-Syn. In addition to its phosphorylation at S129, α-Syn forming the NIIs acquires an epitope antibody reactivity profile that indicates its organization into fibrils, and is associated with the classical markers of α-Syn pathology p62 and ubiquitin. NIIs are also observed in vivo after intracerebral injection of the fibril strain in mice. Our data thus show that the ability to seed NIIs is a strain property that is integrally encoded in the fibril supramolecular architecture. Upstream alterations of cellular mechanisms are not required. In contrast to the lentiform TDP-43 NIIs, which are observed in certain frontotemporal dementias and which are conditional upon GRN or VCP mutations, our data support the hypothesis that the presence of α-Syn NIIs in MSA is instead purely amyloid-strain-dependent.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD), Multiple System Atrophy (MSA), and Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) are the three key clinical entities constituting α-Synucleinopathies [1]

  • Strain 1B was previously selected by serendipity as a “Thioflavin T (ThT)-negative” human α-Syn fibril strain obtained by the shaking of purified recombinant human α-Syn monomers [15]

  • From an ultrastructural point of view, the resulting 1B fibrils appeared to be exclusively populated by compact rod-like fibrils composed of two intertwined protofilaments (Figure 1A,B), with a filament crossover periodicity of 98 ± 9 nm (N = 30), a maximal width of 17 ± 1.4 nm (N = 21) and a width at crossover of 13 ± 1 nm (N = 17)

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s disease (PD), Multiple System Atrophy (MSA), and Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) are the three key clinical entities constituting α-Synucleinopathies [1]. We recently isolated a new synthetic strain of human α-Syn fibrils [15] characterized by (i) an extremely poor staining with Thioflavin T (ThT), (ii) a propensity to induce a massive neuronal α-Syn pathology in vivo, and most strikingly, (iii) a specific ability to seed phosphorylated α-Syn aggregates crisscrossing neuronal nuclei [15], i.e., α-Syn neuronal intranuclear inclusions (NIIs) [50]. These three characteristics point to MSA [44,45,50,51], with NIIs even constituting a specific hallmark of this disease [50]. Temperature was set to 37 ◦C, and continuous shaking at 2000 rpm proceeded for 4 days

Sonication
Electron Microscopy
X-ray Diffraction
Magic-Angle Spinning NMR
Fourier-Transform Infra-Red (FTIR) Spectroscopy
In Vitro α-Syn Pathology, High Content Analysis (HCA) and Laser-Scanning Confocal Microscopy (LSCM)
2.10. In Vivo α-Syn Pathology and Histology
Biophysical Characterization of the Synthetic Human α-Syn Fibril Strain 1B
Neuronal Inclusions Seeded by 1B α-Syn Fibrils
NIIs Seeded by 1B
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NIIs Are Amyloid Assemblies of Endogenous α-Syn
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