Exposure to the Functional Bacterial Amyloid Protein Curli Enhances Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation in Aged Fischer 344 Rats and Caenorhabditis elegans

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作者
Shu G. Chen
Vilius Stribinskis
Madhavi J. Rane
Donald R. Demuth
Evelyne Gozal
Andrew M. Roberts
Rekha Jagadapillai
Ruolan Liu
Kyonghwan Choe
Bhooma Shivakumar
Francheska Son
Shunying Jin
Richard Kerber
Anthony Adame
Eliezer Masliah
Robert P. Friedland
机构
[1] Dept. of Pathology,
[2] Case Western Reserve University,undefined
[3] Brown Cancer Center,undefined
[4] University of Louisville School of Medicine,undefined
[5] Dept. of Medicine,undefined
[6] University of Louisville School of Medicine,undefined
[7] Dept. of Oral Immunology and Infectious Diseases,undefined
[8] University of Louisville School of Dentistry,undefined
[9] Dept. of Pediatrics,undefined
[10] University of Louisville School of Medicine,undefined
[11] Dept. of Physiology,undefined
[12] University of Louisville School of Medicine,undefined
[13] Dept. of Neurology,undefined
[14] University of Louisville School of Medicine,undefined
[15] Dept. of Epidemiology and Population Health,undefined
[16] University of Louisville School of Public Health,undefined
[17] Laboratory of Experimental Neuropathology,undefined
[18] University of California,undefined
[19] San Diego,undefined
[20] California,undefined
[21] USA.,undefined
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摘要
Misfolded alpha-synuclein (AS) and other neurodegenerative disorder proteins display prion-like transmission of protein aggregation. Factors responsible for the initiation of AS aggregation are unknown. To evaluate the role of amyloid proteins made by the microbiota we exposed aged rats and transgenic C. elegans to E. coli producing the extracellular bacterial amyloid protein curli. Rats exposed to curli-producing bacteria displayed increased neuronal AS deposition in both gut and brain and enhanced microgliosis and astrogliosis compared to rats exposed to either mutant bacteria unable to synthesize curli, or to vehicle alone. Animals exposed to curli producing bacteria also had more expression of TLR2, IL-6 and TNF in the brain than the other two groups. There were no differences among the rat groups in survival, body weight, inflammation in the mouth, retina, kidneys or gut epithelia, and circulating cytokine levels. AS-expressing C. elegans fed on curli-producing bacteria also had enhanced AS aggregation. These results suggest that bacterial amyloid functions as a trigger to initiate AS aggregation through cross-seeding and also primes responses of the innate immune system.
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