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1.
Acta Neuropathol Commun ; 11(1): 162, 2023 10 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37814347

The alpha-synuclein (aSyn) seed amplification assay (SAA) can identify aSyn aggregates as indicator for Lewy body pathology in biomaterials of living patients and help in diagnosing Parkinson´s disease and dementia syndromes. Our objective was to confirm that qualitative results of aSyn SAA are reproducible across laboratories and to determine whether quantitative findings correlate with patient clinical characteristics. Therefore cerebrospinal fluid samples were re-analysed by aSyn SAA in a second laboratory with four technical replicates for each sample. Kinetic parameters derived from each aggregation curve were summarized and correlated with patient characteristics. We found that qualitative findings were identical between the two laboratories for 54 of 55 patient samples. The number of positive replicates for each sample also showed good agreement between laboratories. Moreover, specific kinetic parameters of the SAA showed a strong correlation with clinical parameters, notably with cognitive performance evaluated by the Montreal Cognitive Assessment. We concluded that SAA findings are highly reproducible across laboratories following the same protocol. SAA reports not only the presence of Lewy pathology but is also associated with clinical characteristics. Thus, aSyn SAA can potentially be used for patient stratification and determining the target engagement of aSyn targeting treatments.


Cognitive Dysfunction , Lewy Body Disease , Parkinson Disease , Humans , alpha-Synuclein/analysis , Lewy Bodies/pathology , Lewy Body Disease/pathology , Parkinson Disease/complications , Parkinson Disease/diagnosis , Parkinson Disease/cerebrospinal fluid , Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnosis
2.
Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr ; 91(4): 141-146, 2023 Apr.
Article De | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37040787

Englisch: Being one of the most common genetic neurodegenerative disease, Huntington's disease has been a model disease - also for gene therapy. Among the various options, the development of antisense oligonucleotides is the most advanced. Further options at the RNA level include micro-RNAs and modulators of RNA processing (splicing), at the DNA level zinc finger proteins. Several products are in clinical trials. These differ in their mode of application and in the extent of systemic availability. Another important difference between therapeutic strategies could be whether all forms of the huntingtin protein are targeted in the same extent, or whether a therapy preferentially targets particular toxic forms such as the exon1 protein. The results of the recently terminated GENERATION HD1 trial were somewhat sobering, most likely due to the side effect-related hydrocephalus. Therefore they represent just one step towards the development of an effective gene therapy against Huntington's disease.


Huntington Disease , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Humans , Huntington Disease/genetics , Genetic Therapy/methods , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/genetics , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/therapeutic use , Huntingtin Protein/genetics , Huntingtin Protein/metabolism , Huntingtin Protein/therapeutic use
3.
Int J Mol Sci ; 21(10)2020 May 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32443559

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is the most common and devastating motor neuron (MN) disease. Its pathophysiological cascade is still enigmatic. More than 90% of ALS patients suffer from sporadic ALS, which makes it specifically demanding to generate appropriate model systems. One interesting aspect considering the seeding, spreading and further disease development of ALS is the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). We therefore asked whether CSF from sporadic ALS patients is capable of causing disease typical changes in human patient-derived spinal MN cultures and thus could represent a novel model system for sporadic ALS. By using induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived MNs from healthy controls and monogenetic forms of ALS we could demonstrate a harmful effect of ALS-CSF on healthy donor-derived human MNs. Golgi fragmentation-a typical finding in lower organism models and human postmortem tissue-was induced solely by addition of ALS-CSF, but not control-CSF. No other neurodegenerative hallmarks-including pathological protein aggregation-were found, underpinning Golgi fragmentation as early event in the neurodegenerative cascade. Of note, these changes occurred predominantly in MNs, the cell type primarily affected in ALS. We thus present a novel way to model early features of sporadic ALS.


Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/physiopathology , Golgi Apparatus/pathology , Motor Neurons/pathology , Protein Aggregation, Pathological , Spinal Cord/physiopathology , Adult , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/metabolism , Cerebrospinal Fluid , Female , Humans , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Neurons/metabolism , Spinal Cord/metabolism
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