Early synaptic changes and reduced brain connectivity in PD-like mice with depressive phenotype
Early synaptic changes and reduced brain connectivity in PD-like mice with depressive phenotype
Bortolozzi, A.; Miquel Rio, L.; Jerico-Escolar, J.; Sarries-Serrano, U.; Yanes-Castilla, C.; Paz, V.; Torres-Lopez, M.; Argibay, U.; Munoz, E.; Lopez-Gil, X.
AbstractAnxiety and depression are common in Parkinson\'s disease (PD), affecting quality of life. Aggregates of -synuclein (-Syn) are found in serotonergic (5-HT) raphe nuclei early in the disease, but their relationship to brain changes is unclear. We investigated synaptic plasticity, neuronal activity, and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)-based brain connectivity in a PD-like mouse model with depressive phenotype. AAV-induced human -Syn accumulation in raphe 5-HT neurons causes progressive synaptic pathology in interconnected brain regions. This is marked by lower MAP-2, PSD95 and higher SV2A, VAMP2, which are key to synaptic structure and function, as confirmed in human brain tissue samples. Abnormalities in Egr-1-dependent neuronal activity and region-specific differences in resting-state functional brain activity were also detected eight weeks post-AAV infusion, before neurodegeneration. This provides evidence for synaptic and fMRI markers associated with -Syn pathology in emotional brain circuits, and has translational importance for identifying PD patients at risk for depression.