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Publication : Oligodendroglial α-synucleinopathy-driven neuroinflammation in multiple system atrophy.

First Author  Hoffmann A Year  2019
Journal  Brain Pathol Volume  29
Issue  3 Pages  380-396
PubMed ID  30444295 Mgi Jnum  J:338181
Mgi Id  MGI:7510268 Doi  10.1111/bpa.12678
Citation  Hoffmann A, et al. (2019) Oligodendroglial alpha-synucleinopathy-driven neuroinflammation in multiple system atrophy. Brain Pathol 29(3):380-396
abstractText  Neuroinflammation and oligodendroglial cytoplasmic alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) inclusions (GCIs) are important neuropathological characteristics of multiple system atrophy (MSA). GCIs are known to interfere with oligodendroglial maturation and consequently result in myelin loss. The neuroinflammatory phenotype in the context of MSA, however, remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate MSA-associated neuroinflammation being restricted to myeloid cells and tightly linked to oligodendroglial alpha-syncleinopathy. In human putaminal post-mortem tissue of MSA patients, neuroinflammation was observed in white matter regions only. This locally restricted neuroinflammation coincided with elevated numbers of alpha-syn inclusions, while gray matter with less alpha-synucleinopathy remained unaffected. In order to analyze the temporal pattern of neuroinflammation, a transgenic mouse model overexpressing human alpha-syn under the control of an oligodendrocyte-specific myelin basic protein (MBP) promoter (MBP29-halpha-syn mice) was assessed in a pre-symptomatic and symptomatic disease stage. Strikingly, we detected an increased neuroinflammation in regions with a high alpha-syn load, the corpus callosum and the striatum, of MBP29-halpha-syn mice, already at a pre-symptomatic stage. Furthermore, this inflammatory response was restricted to myeloid cells being highly proliferative and showing an activated, phagocytic phenotype. In contrast, severe astrogliosis was observed only in gray matter regions of MSA patients as well as MBP29-halpha-syn mice. To further characterize the influence of oligodendrocytes on initiation of the myeloid immune response, we performed RNA sequencing analysis of alpha-syn overexpressing primary oligodendrocytes. A distinct gene expression profile including upregulation of cytokines important for myeloid cell attraction and proliferation was detected in alpha-syn overexpressing oligodendrocytes. Additionally, microdissected tissue of MBP29-halpha-syn mice exhibited a similar cellular gene expression profile in white matter regions even pre-symptomatically. Collectively, these results imply an early crosstalk between neuroinflammation and oligodendrocytes containing alpha-syn inclusions leading to an immune response locally restricted to white matter regions in MSA.
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