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Publication : A gut bacterial amyloid promotes α-synuclein aggregation and motor impairment in mice.

First Author  Sampson TR Year  2020
Journal  Elife Volume  9
PubMed ID  32043464 Mgi Jnum  J:291940
Mgi Id  MGI:6443004 Doi  10.7554/eLife.53111
Citation  Sampson TR, et al. (2020) A gut bacterial amyloid promotes alpha-synuclein aggregation and motor impairment in mice. Elife 9:e53111
abstractText  Amyloids are a class of protein with unique self-aggregation properties, and their aberrant accumulation can lead to cellular dysfunctions associated with neurodegenerative diseases. While genetic and environmental factors can influence amyloid formation, molecular triggers and/or facilitators are not well defined. Growing evidence suggests that non-identical amyloid proteins may accelerate reciprocal amyloid aggregation in a prion-like fashion. While humans encode ~30 amyloidogenic proteins, the gut microbiome also produces functional amyloids. For example, curli are cell surface amyloid proteins abundantly expressed by certain gut bacteria. In mice overexpressing the human amyloid alpha-synuclein (alphaSyn), we reveal that colonization with curli-producing Escherichia coli promotes alphaSyn pathology in the gut and the brain. Curli expression is required for E. coli to exacerbate alphaSyn-induced behavioral deficits, including intestinal and motor impairments. Purified curli subunits accelerate alphaSyn aggregation in biochemical assays, while oral treatment of mice with a gut-restricted amyloid inhibitor prevents curli-mediated acceleration of pathology and behavioral abnormalities. We propose that exposure to microbial amyloids in the gastrointestinal tract can accelerate alphaSyn aggregation and disease in the gut and the brain.
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