Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of ubiquitin-immunoreactivity (Ub-IR) as inclusions and skeins in motor neurones of both the familial and sporadic forms of motor neurone disease (MND). There is evidence that interneurones also degenerate in MND, but Ub-IR in ventral horn spinal interneurones has not been studied previously. Here, Ub-IR was investigated in 1445 presumed interneurones and 1086 presumed motor neurones counted in three random 20-microm sections of the ventral horn of the third lumbar segment of the spinal cord of each of seven controls and seven patients with MND. The ventral horn was divided into four quadrants; the dorsomedial quadrant contains almost exclusively interneurones and the ventrolateral quadrant largely motor neurones. The neurones were also classified by morphological and size criteria into presumed interneurones (< 25 microm) and presumed motor neurones (>or= 25 microm). Ub-IR was classified as inclusions, skeins and dispersed cytoplasmic and nuclear staining. Ub-IR inclusions or skeins were not observed in the controls but 6.6% of neurones (motor neurones and interneurones) showed the presence of dispersed cytoplasm staining and nuclear staining. The incidence of Ub-IR cytoplasmic and nuclear staining was significantly greater in both motor neurones and interneurones of MND patients than controls. Ub-IR was less frequent in MND cases in which a great loss of neurones was observed. Ub-IR was significantly more frequent in motor neurones than interneurones, both in patients and controls. Ub-IR inclusions and skeins were only observed in motor neurones from MND patients. Ub-IR inclusions were not observed in presumed spinal interneurones, while skeins were only seen in three out of 565 of these cells (two of them in the dorsomedial quadrant) in two out of seven patients. Thus, although presumed spinal interneurones occasionally revealed Ub-IR features similar to motor neurones, the rare staining of Ub-IR skeins and the lack of Ub-IR inclusions in interneurones in MND suggests that these neurones only occasionally form ubiquitin-protein conjugates. Neuronal size, rather than type, may be important in determining whether ubiquitin-protein conjugates form in the ventral horn neurones in MND.

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