Study Design
The researchers used iPSCs from three PD patients who carried mutations in the LRRK2 gene to grow astrocytes and neu-rons, which were then co-cultured with healthy midbrain neurons from two con-trol patients. Structural changes associated with neurodegeneration and neuron loss developed in control neurons exposed to the mutated astrocytes after approximately one month.
Although it is also possible that PD astrocytes interfered with differentiation and/or maturation of vmDAN progeni-tors from the stem cells, the researchers noted that they used vmDAN differenti-ated cultures at 35 days, past the point when they might have matured into other types of cells. Moreover, there was a progressive decline and accumulation of alpha-synuclein over time only in healthy neurons co-cultured with PD astrocytes, and not in those co-cultured with control cells, they said.
That a CMA activator at least partially restored normal alpha-synuclein activity indicated that upregulation was still pos-sible and sufficient to return affected neurons to near normal levels. However, because the researchers were unable to completely restore them suggests that other non-alpha synuclelin-related fac-tors secreted by PD astrocytes might play a role, Dr. Raya said.
“Interestingly, the treatment with [CMA] activator not only cleared out alpha-synuclein in astrocytes, but also in vmDANs, partially restoring neuron survival and decreasing the number of TH-positive cells with a degenerative morphology.”
Dr. Raya said the team’s next goal is to investigate whether the findings also apply to patients with sporadic forms of the disease. The investigators are already looking into other mechanisms by which PD astrocytes might pass the disease to neurons.
Expert Commentary
Neurology professor Serge Przedborski, MD, PhD, chief of the movement disorders division and co-director of the Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease at Columbia University Irving
Medical Center, told Neurology Today that as in other neurodegenerative disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the study found that non-neuronal cells can contribute to the demise of neurons. However, he noted, much more work is needed to better clarify and confirm the reported findings.
“While the study provides an exciting proof-of principle, several points deserve clarification and call for additional stud-ies,” he said. “For instance, further demonstration is necessary to establish whether or not the decline in the number of vmDANs truly reflects death, as the authors concluded.”
“It would have been more convincing to see data for actual cell death markers rather than vmDANs counts since phe-notypic dopaminergic markers such as tyrosine hydroxylase can be readily downregulated in response to stress, giv-ing rise to a false interpretation of neu-ron loss,” Dr. Przedborski told Neurology Today.
He said that he remains uncertain about whether the mutant astrocytes exerted a deleterious effect on their neighboring vmDANs by way of a toxic phenomenon, as the authors maintained, or by merely proviidiing beneficial factors necessary to the well-being and survival of vmDANs.
“While this question can be readily clarified with future studies, it would have been crucial to have settled this issue since, to accept the pathogenic scenario proposed by the authors, one must first agree with the notion that mutant astrocytes are toxic,” he said.
“Lastly, the type of molecular mechanism targeted, autophagy, is so fundamental and a hub for so many factors, that it is difficult to conclude with certainty whether the improvement the authors report is truly or solely related to changes in alpha-synuclein turnover.”
Commenting on the study, Alice Chen-Plotkin, MD, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, said: “I think that the key thing about this study is that it builds on a body of literature that is emerging that suggests alpha-synuclein protein can spread from cell to cell, and may occur between neurons and other types of cells,” she said.
Dr. Chen-Plotkin directs the Molecular Integration in Neurological
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