ABSTRACT
The ordered assembly of α-synuclein protein into filaments encoded by SNCA characterizes neurodegenerative diseases called synucleinopathies. Lewy body disease (LBD) shows predominantly neuronal α-synuclein pathology and multiple system atrophy (MSA) predominantly oligodendrocytic α-synuclein pathology affecting subcortical brain structures. Based on cryo-electron microscopy, it was reported that structures of α-synuclein filaments from LBD differ from MSA and juvenile onset synucleinopathy (JOS) caused by a 21-nucleotide duplication in the second exon of one allele of SNCA gene 1-3. Importantly, a rare subtype of MSA, called atypical MSA4 shows abundant neuronal argyrophilic α-synuclein inclusions in the limbic system. Current concepts indicate that disease entities are characterized by unique protofilament folds. Here we demonstrate that in addition to the MSA fold, α-synuclein can form a new Lewy-MSA hybrid fold in the same brain region, leading to the atypical histopathological form of MSA. Distinct biochemical characteristics of α-synuclein, as demonstrated by protease-sensitivity digestion assay, seed amplification assays (SAAs) and conformational stability assay (CSA), are also linked to cytopathological differences (e.g. neuronal or oligodendroglial). We expand the current structure-based classification of α−synucleinopathies and propose that cell-specific protein pathologies can be associated with distinct filament folds.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Abstract corrected: "juvenile onset synucleinopathy (JOS) caused by a 21-nucleotide duplication in the second exon of one allele of SNCA gene"