Motor neuron disease discovery offers new insights into potential treatment targets
31 May 2017
Scientists have discovered how certain forms of motor neuron disease begin and progress at cellular and molecular levels, revealing potential new ways to slow down or even stop this process.
By studying cells from patients with motor neuron disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the team from the Francis Crick Institute and UCL revealed a detailed picture of how motor neurons - nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control our muscles and allow us to move, talk and breathe - decline and die.
The research, published in Cell Reports, also shows that healthy neuron-supporting cells called astrocytes may play a role in the survival of motor neurons in this type of ALS, highlighting their potential role in combating neurodegenerative diseases. The work was co-led by Dr Sonia Gandhi and Dr Rickie Patani, group leaders at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL, and consultant neurologists at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square.
"Understanding how and why neurons die is clearly vital in neurodegenerative diseases, but part of the puzzle is also understanding the emerging role of astrocytes in this context," said lead author Dr Sonia Gandhi (UCL Institute of Neurology).
The team took skin cells from healthy volunteers and patients with a genetic mutation that causes ALS, and turned them into stem cells capable of becoming many other cell types. Using specific chemical signals, they then 'guided' the stem cells into becoming motor neurons and astrocytes.
"We manipulated the cells using insights from developmental biology, so that they closely resembled a specific part of the spinal cord from which motor neurons arise," said senior author Dr Rickie Patani (UCL Institute of Neurology). "It's like changing the postcode of a house without actually moving it. We were able to create pure, high-quality samples of motor neurons and astrocytes which accurately represent the cells affected in patients with ALS."
Using a range of cellular and molecular techniques, the team tracked motor neurons over time to see what went wrong in the patient-derived cells compared to those from healthy people. They found that an important protein known as TDP-43 leaks out of the nucleus where it belongs, causing a chain reaction that damaged several crucial parts of the cell's 'machinery'. Defining the sequence of molecular events that led to motor neuron death in an experiment using human-derived cells is an important step forward.
"It's a case of the right protein in the wrong place. When TDP-43 leaves the cell nucleus, it causes a series of problems inside the cell that together lead to cell death," said Dr Patani.
Dr Gandhi said: "Knowing when things go wrong inside a cell, and in what sequence, is a useful approach to define the 'critical' molecular event in disease. By modelling the human disease in a dish, we found that this well-recognised event in ALS occurred early, and some time before the neurons showed other signs of stress. One therapeutic approach to stop sick motor neurons from dying could be to prevent proteins like TDP-43 from leaving the nucleus, or try to move them back."
The team suspected that astrocytes from the patients' cells might also be affected, becoming less efficient over time and eventually dying. To test this, they mixed different combinations of healthy and ALS patient-derived motor neurons and astrocytes, and followed their fate using highly sensitive imaging approaches. They found that healthy astrocytes kept sick motor neurons alive and functioning for longer, but sick astrocytes struggled to keep even healthy motor neurons alive.
"Our work, along with other studies of ageing and neurodegeneration, would suggest that the cross-talk between neurons and their supporting cells is crucial in the development and progression of ALS," said Dr Patani.
The research was funded by Wellcome, Cerevance, Grand Challenges, the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Queen Square Dementia Biomedical Research Unit and the NIHR University College Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre.
Links
- Research paper in Cell Reports
- Dr Rickie Patani's academic profile
- Dr Sonia Gandhi's academic profile
- UCL Institute of Neurology
Image
- Left images show healthy human motor neurons (far left) and sick ALS motor neurons (centre left); Right shows a protein known as TDP-43 that stays in the nucleus of healthy cells (centre right) but leaks out in sick cells (far right), causing a chain reaction that damages several crucial parts of the cell's 'machinery'. Credit: Dr Zhi Yao.