4.8 Article

Altered perivascular fibroblast activity precedes ALS disease onset

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01295-9

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Funding

  1. MRC [UKDRI-5008] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study suggests that increased activity of perivascular fibroblast cells and vascular remodeling early in ALS pathogenesis can predict patient survival time. Elevated levels of SPP1 in plasma at disease diagnosis are a stronger predictor of shorter survival in ALS patients than established risk factors.
Apart from well-defined factors in neuronal cells(1), only a few reports consider that the variability of sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) progression can depend on less-defined contributions from glia(2,3) and blood vessels(4). In this study we use an expression-weighted cell-type enrichment method to infer cell activity in spinal cord samples from patients with sporadic ALS and mouse models of this disease. Here we report that patients with sporadic ALS present cell activity patterns consistent with two mouse models in which enrichments of vascular cell genes preceded microglial response. Notably, during the presymptomatic stage, perivascular fibroblast cells showed the strongest gene enrichments, and their marker proteins SPP1 and COL6A1 accumulated in enlarged perivascular spaces in patients with sporadic ALS. Moreover, in plasma of 574 patients with ALS from four independent cohorts, increased levels of SPP1 at disease diagnosis repeatedly predicted shorter survival with stronger effect than the established risk factors of bulbar onset or neurofilament levels in cerebrospinal fluid. We propose that the activity of the recently discovered perivascular fibroblast can predict survival of patients with ALS and provide a new conceptual framework to re-evaluate definitions of ALS etiology. Increased perivascular fibroblast activity and vascular remodeling occurs early in ALS pathogenesis and can predict patient survival time

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