A progressive dopaminergic phenotype associated with neurotoxic conversion of α-synuclein in BAC-transgenic rats

Silke Nuber(University of California San Diego), Florian Harmuth(University of Tübingen), Zacharias Kohl(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Anthony Adame(University of California San Diego), Margaritha Trejo(University of California San Diego), Kai Schönig(Heidelberg University), Frank Zimmermann(Heidelberg University), Claudia Bauer(University of Tübingen), Nicolas Casadei(University of Tübingen), Christiane Giel(University of Tübingen), Carsten Calaminus(Siemens (Germany)), Bernd J. Pichler(Siemens (Germany)), Poul Henning Jensen(Aarhus University), Christian P. Müller(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Davide Amato(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Johannes Kornhuber(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Peter Teismann(University of Aberdeen), Hodaka Yamakado(Kyoto University), Ryōsuke Takahashi(Kyoto University), Jürgen Winkler(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Eliezer Masliah(University of California San Diego), Olaf Rieß(University of Tübingen)
Brain
February 1, 2013
Cited by 170Open Access
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Abstract

Conversion of soluble α-synuclein into insoluble and fibrillar inclusions is a hallmark of Parkinson's disease and other synucleinopathies. Accumulating evidence points towards a relationship between its generation at nerve terminals and structural synaptic pathology. Little is known about the pathogenic impact of α-synuclein conversion and deposition at nigrostriatal dopaminergic synapses in transgenic mice, mainly owing to expression limitations of the α-synuclein construct. Here, we explore whether both the rat as a model and expression of the bacterial artificial chromosome construct consisting of human full-length wild-type α-synuclein could exert dopaminergic neuropathological effects. We found that the human promoter induced a pan-neuronal expression, matching the rodent α-synuclein expression pattern, however, with prominent C-terminally truncated fragments. Ageing promoted conversion of both full-length and C-terminally truncated α-synuclein species into insolube and proteinase K-resistant fibres, with strongest accumulation in the striatum, resembling biochemical changes seen in human Parkinson's disease. Transgenic rats develop early changes in novelty-seeking, avoidance and smell before the progressive motor deficit. Importantly, the observed pathological changes were associated with severe loss of the dopaminergic integrity, thus resembling more closely the human pathology.


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