TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of abnormalities at the neuromuscular junction in the SOD1-G93A mouse model of ALS
T2 - dysfunction then disruption of postsynaptic structure precede motor symptoms
AU - McIntosh, Jayne
AU - Mekrouda, Imane
AU - Dashti, Maryam
AU - Giuraniuc, Claudiu
AU - Banks, Robert W.
AU - Miles, Gareth Brian
AU - Bewick, Guy S.
N1 - Funding: This project was funded by a PhD studentship to JM from Motor Neurone Disease Scotland, on grant number RGB5753 to GSB and GBM.
PY - 2023/5/19
Y1 - 2023/5/19
N2 - The ultimate deficit in ALS is neuromuscular junction (NMJ) loss,
producing permanent paralysis, ultimately in respiratory muscles.
However, understanding the functional and structural deficits at NMJs
prior to this loss is crucial for therapeutic strategy design. Should
early interventions focus on reversing denervation, or supporting
largely intact NMJs that are functionally impaired? We therefore
determined when functional and structural deficits appeared in
diaphragmatic NMJs relative to the onset of hindlimb tremor (the first
overt motor symptoms) in vivo in the SOD1-G93A mouse model of ALS.
Significant reduction in the amplitudes of spontaneous miniature
endplate potentials (mEPPs) and evoked EPPs emerged only at early
symptomatic ages (in our colony, 18-22 weeks). Reductions in mEPP
frequency, number of vesicles per EPP, and EPP rise time were seen
earlier, at 16weeks, but this reversed by early symptomatic ages.
However, the earliest and most striking impairment was an inability to
maintain EPP amplitude during a 20 Hz stimulus train, which appeared 6
weeks before overt in vivo motor symptoms. Despite this, fluorescent
α-bungarotoxin labelling revealed no systematic, progressive changes in
11 comprehensive NMJ morphological parameters (area, shape, compactness,
number of acetylcholine receptor, AChR, regions, etc.) with disease
progression. Rather, while NMJs were largely normally-shaped, from 16
weeks there was a progressive and substantial disruption in AChR
concentration and distribution within the NMJ footprint. Thus, NMJ
functional deficits appear at least 6 weeks before motor symptoms in
vivo, while structural deficits occur 4 weeks later, and predominantly
within NMJs. These data suggest initial therapies focused on rectifying
suboptimal NMJ function could produce effective relief of symptoms of
weakness.
AB - The ultimate deficit in ALS is neuromuscular junction (NMJ) loss,
producing permanent paralysis, ultimately in respiratory muscles.
However, understanding the functional and structural deficits at NMJs
prior to this loss is crucial for therapeutic strategy design. Should
early interventions focus on reversing denervation, or supporting
largely intact NMJs that are functionally impaired? We therefore
determined when functional and structural deficits appeared in
diaphragmatic NMJs relative to the onset of hindlimb tremor (the first
overt motor symptoms) in vivo in the SOD1-G93A mouse model of ALS.
Significant reduction in the amplitudes of spontaneous miniature
endplate potentials (mEPPs) and evoked EPPs emerged only at early
symptomatic ages (in our colony, 18-22 weeks). Reductions in mEPP
frequency, number of vesicles per EPP, and EPP rise time were seen
earlier, at 16weeks, but this reversed by early symptomatic ages.
However, the earliest and most striking impairment was an inability to
maintain EPP amplitude during a 20 Hz stimulus train, which appeared 6
weeks before overt in vivo motor symptoms. Despite this, fluorescent
α-bungarotoxin labelling revealed no systematic, progressive changes in
11 comprehensive NMJ morphological parameters (area, shape, compactness,
number of acetylcholine receptor, AChR, regions, etc.) with disease
progression. Rather, while NMJs were largely normally-shaped, from 16
weeks there was a progressive and substantial disruption in AChR
concentration and distribution within the NMJ footprint. Thus, NMJ
functional deficits appear at least 6 weeks before motor symptoms in
vivo, while structural deficits occur 4 weeks later, and predominantly
within NMJs. These data suggest initial therapies focused on rectifying
suboptimal NMJ function could produce effective relief of symptoms of
weakness.
KW - Neuromuscular junction
KW - Motor neuron disease
KW - Neuromuscular transmission
KW - SOD1-G93A
KW - ALS
KW - Acetylcholine receptor
KW - Mouse
U2 - 10.3389/fnmol.2023.1169075
DO - 10.3389/fnmol.2023.1169075
M3 - Article
SN - 1662-5099
VL - 16
JO - Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
JF - Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
M1 - 1169075
ER -