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α-Synuclein: Multiple System Atrophy Prions
Author(s) -
Amanda L. Woerman,
Joel C. Watts,
Atsushi Aoyagi,
Kurt Giles,
Lefkos Middleton,
Stanley B. Prusiner
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cold spring harbor perspectives in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2472-5412
pISSN - 2157-1422
DOI - 10.1101/cshperspect.a024588
Subject(s) - gerontology , library science , environmental ethics , medicine , philosophy , computer science
Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease arising from the misfolding and accumulation of the protein α-synuclein in oligodendrocytes, where it forms glial cytoplasmic inclusions (GCIs). Several years of studying synthetic α-synuclein fibrils has provided critical insight into the ability of α-synuclein to template endogenous protein misfolding, giving rise to fibrillar structures capable of propagating from cell to cell. However, more recent studies with MSA-derived α-synuclein aggregates have shown that they have a similar ability to undergo template-directed propagation, like PrP prions. Almost 20 years after α-synuclein was discovered as the primary component of GCIs, α-synuclein aggregates isolated from MSA patient samples were shown to infect cultured mammalian cells and also to transmit neurological disease to transgenic mice. These findings argue that α-synuclein becomes a prion in MSA patients. In this review, we discuss the in vitro and in vivo data supporting the recent classification of MSA as a prion disease.

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