Neurobiology of Disease (Mar 2021)

Evaluation of blood flow as a route for propagation in experimental synucleinopathy

  • Xuan Yu,
  • Marine Persillet,
  • Ling Zhang,
  • Yu Zhang,
  • Sun Xiuping,
  • Xianglei Li,
  • Gao Ran,
  • Ludivine S. Breger,
  • Sandra Dovero,
  • Gregory Porras,
  • Benjamin Dehay,
  • Erwan Bezard,
  • Chuan Qin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 150
p. 105255

Abstract

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In Parkinson's disease, synucleinopathy is hypothesized to spread from the enteric nervous system, via the vagus nerve, to the central nervous system. Recent evidences collected in non-human primates challenge however the hypothesis of a transmission of α-synuclein (α-syn) pathology through the vagus nerve. Would the hypothesis whereby the bloodstream acts as a route for long-distance transmission of pathological α-syn hold true, an inter-individual transmission of synucleinopathy could occur via blood contact. Here, we used a parabiosis approach to join the circulatory systems of wild type and GFP transgenic C57BL/6 J mice, for which one of the partners parabiont received a stereotaxic intranigral injection of patient-derived α-syn aggregates. While the Lewy Body-receiving mice exhibited a loss of dopamine neurons and an increase in nigral S129 phosphorylated α-syn immunoreactivity, their parabiotic bloodstream-sharing partners did not show any trend for a lesion or change in S129 phosphorylated-α-syn levels. Altogether, our study suggests that, in the patient-derived α-synuclein aggregates-injected mouse model and within the selected time frame, the disease is not “transmitted” through the bloodstream.

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