Abstract

Parkinson's disease psychosis is a prevalent yet underreported and understudied nonmotor manifestation of Parkinson's disease and, arguably, the most debilitating. It is unknown if α-synuclein plays a role in psychosis, and if so, this endophenotype may be crucial for elucidating the neurodegenerative process. We sought to dissect the underlying neurobiology of novelty-induced hyperactivity, reminiscent of psychosis-like behavior, in human α-synuclein BAC rats. Herein, we demonstrate a prodromal psychosis-like phenotype, including late-onset sensorimotor gating disruption, striatal hyperdopaminergic signaling, and persistent novelty-induced hyperactivity (up to 18 months), albeit reduced baseline locomotor activity, that is augmented by d-amphetamine and reversed by classical and atypical antipsychotics. MicroRNA-mediated α-synuclein downregulation in the ventral midbrain rescues the hyperactive phenotype and restores striatal dopamine levels. This phenotype is accompanied by an abundance of age-, brain region- and gene dose-dependent aberrant α-synuclein, including hyperphosphorylation, C-terminal truncation, aggregation pathology, and mild nigral neurodegeneration (27%). Our findings demonstrate a potential role of α-synuclein in Parkinson's disease psychosis and provide evidence of region-specific perturbations prior to neurodegeneration phenoconversion. The reported phenotype coincides with the latest clinical findings that suggest a premotor hyperdopaminergic state may occur, while at the same time, premotor psychotic symptoms are increasingly being recognized. © 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call