Immune-mediated myogenesis and acetylcholine receptor clustering promote a slow disease progression in ALS mouse models

免疫介导的肌肉生成和乙酰胆碱受体聚集促进 ALS 小鼠模型中疾病进展缓慢

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作者:Cassandra Margotta #, Paola Fabbrizio #, Marco Ceccanti, Chiara Cambieri, Gabriele Ruffolo, Jessica D'Agostino, Maria Chiara Trolese, Pierangelo Cifelli, Veronica Alfano, Christian Laurini, Silvia Scaricamazza, Alberto Ferri, Gianni Sorarù, Eleonora Palma, Maurizio Inghilleri, Caterina Bendotti, Gio

Background

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a heterogeneous disease in terms of onset and progression rate. This may account for therapeutic clinical trial failure. Transgenic SOD1G93A mice on C57 or 129Sv background have a slow and fast disease progression rate, mimicking the variability observed in patients. Based on evidence inferring the active influence of skeletal muscle on ALS pathogenesis, we explored whether dysregulation in hindlimb skeletal muscle reflects the phenotypic difference between the two mouse models.

Conclusions

Our findings further pinpoint the pivotal role of skeletal muscle in ALS, providing new insights into underestimated disease mechanisms occurring at the periphery and providing useful (diagnostic, prognostic, and mechanistic) information to facilitate the translation of cost-effective therapeutic strategies from the laboratory to the clinic.

Methods

Ex vivo immunohistochemical, biochemical, and biomolecular methodologies, together with in vivo electrophysiology and in vitro approaches on primary cells, were used to afford a comparative and longitudinal analysis of gastrocnemius medialis between fast- and slow-progressing ALS mice.

Results

We reported that slow-progressing mice counteracted muscle denervation atrophy by increasing acetylcholine receptor clustering, enhancing evoked currents, and preserving compound muscle action potential. This matched with prompt and sustained myogenesis, likely triggered by an early inflammatory response switching the infiltrated macrophages towards a M2 pro-regenerative phenotype. Conversely, upon denervation, fast-progressing mice failed to promptly activate a compensatory muscle response, exhibiting a rapidly progressive deterioration of muscle force. Conclusions: Our findings further pinpoint the pivotal role of skeletal muscle in ALS, providing new insights into underestimated disease mechanisms occurring at the periphery and providing useful (diagnostic, prognostic, and mechanistic) information to facilitate the translation of cost-effective therapeutic strategies from the laboratory to the clinic.

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