Pericytes take up and degrade α-synuclein but succumb to apoptosis under cellular stress

周细胞吸收并降解 α-突触核蛋白,但在细胞应激下导致细胞凋亡

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作者:Taylor J Stevenson, Rebecca H Johnson #, Jimmy Savistchenko #, Justin Rustenhoven, Zoe Woolf, Leon C D Smyth, Helen C Murray, Richard L M Faull, Jason Correia, Patrick Schweder, Peter Heppner, Clinton Turner, Ronald Melki, Birger V Dieriks, Maurice A Curtis, Michael Dragunow

Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterised by the progressive loss of midbrain dopaminergic neurons and the presence of aggregated α-synuclein (α-syn). Pericytes and microglia, two non-neuronal cells contain α-syn in the human brain, however, their role in disease processes is poorly understood. Pericytes, found surrounding the capillaries in the brain are important for maintaining the blood-brain barrier, controlling blood flow and mediating inflammation. In this study, primary human brain pericytes and microglia were exposed to two different α-synuclein aggregates. Inflammatory responses were assessed using immunocytochemistry, cytometric bead arrays and proteome profiler cytokine array kits. Fixed flow cytometry was used to investigate the uptake and subsequent degradation of α-syn in pericytes. We found that the two α-syn aggregates are devoid of inflammatory and cytotoxic actions on human brain derived pericytes and microglia. Although α-syn did not induce an inflammatory response, pericytes efficiently take up and degrade α-syn through the lysosomal pathway but not the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Furthermore, when pericytes were exposed the ubiquitin proteasome inhibitor-MG132 and α-syn aggregates, there was profound cytotoxicity through the production of reactive oxygen species resulting in apoptosis. These results suggest that the observed accumulation of α-syn in pericytes in human PD brains likely plays a role in PD pathogenesis, perhaps by causing cerebrovascular instability, under conditions of cellular stress.

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