4.7 Article

Properties of Glial Cell at the Neuromuscular Junction Are Incompatible with Synaptic Repair in the SOD1G37R ALS Mouse Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 40, Pages 7759-7777

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1748-18.2020

Keywords

galectin-3; muscarinic receptors; neuron-glia interactions; perisynaptic Schwann cells; purinergic receptors; sprouting

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research [MOP-111070]
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  3. Robert Packard Center for ALS Research
  4. Fonds Recherche Quebec-Sante Leader Opportunity Fund
  5. ALS Society of Canada
  6. Fonds Recherche Quebec-Sante

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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting motoneurons (MNs) in a motor-unit (MU)-dependent manner. Glial dysfunction contributes to numerous aspects of the disease. At the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), early alterations in perisynaptic Schwann cell (PSC), glial cells at this synapse, may impact their ability to regulate NMJ stability and repair. Indeed, muscarinic receptors (mAChRs) regulate the repair phenotype of PSCs and are overactivated at disease-resistant NMJs Isoleus muscle (SOL)] in SOD1(G37R) mice. However, it remains unknown whether this is the case at disease-vulnerable NMJs and whether it translates into an impairment of PSC-dependent repair mechanisms. We used SOL and sternomastoid (STM) muscles from SOD1(G37R) mice and performed Ca2+-imaging to monitor PSC activity and used immunohistochemistry to analyze their repair and phagocytic properties. We show that PSC mAChR-dependent activity was transiently increased at disease-vulnerable NMJs (STM muscle). Furthermore, PSCs from both muscles extended disorganized processes from denervated NMJs and failed to initiate or guide nerve terminal sprouts at disease-vulnerable NMJs, a phenomenon essential for compensatory reinnervation. This was accompanied by a failure of numerous PSCs to upregulate galectin-3 (MAC-2), a marker of glial axonal debris phagocytosis, on NMJ denervation in SOD1 mice. Finally, differences in these PSC-dependent NMJ repair mechanisms were MU type dependent, thus reflecting MU vulnerability in ALS. Together, these results reveal that neuron-glia communication is ubiquitously altered at the NMJ in ALS. This appears to prevent PSCs from adopting a repair phenotype, resulting in a maladapted response to denervation at the NMJ in ALS.

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