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Bifluorescent Analysis of ⍺-Synuclein Aggregation In Vivo

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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa

Abstract

Parkinson’s disease is an incurable neurodegenerative disease characterized by motor deficits, owing to dopaminergic denervation in the nigrostriatal pathway. The abnormal formation of hallmark Lewy bodies underlies the disease process. The pre-synaptic protein alpha- synuclein (⍺-syn) has prion-like properties arising from its propensity to propagate, seed misfolding, and self-aggregate. Pathogenesis is postulated to arise in olfactory and enteric regions, exploiting connected neuronal pathways to ultimately propagate to the substantia nigra pars compacta. There is little known about the earliest stages of ⍺-syn aggregation and its prion-like propagation mechanisms. Bimolecular fluorescence complementation of ⍺-syn aggregates has allowed us to directly visualize aggregation in transgenic mice and mice transduced with an adeno-associated virus vector. Although our transgenic mice expressed BiSyn in a mosaic fashion that limited utility, we were successful in transducing neurons in the mouse striatum. This work has validated the AAV2/9-CMV-BiSyn approach as groundwork for future systematic studies.

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Parkinson's disease, Alpha-synuclein, Bimolecular fluorescence complementation, Position effect variegation, Adeno-associated virus

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