Litcius/Paper detail

Astrogliosis and sexually dimorphic neurodegeneration and microgliosis in the olfactory bulb in Parkinson’s disease

Alicia Flores‐Cuadrado, Daniel Saiz‐Sánchez, Alicia Mohedano‐Moriano, Elena Lamas-Cenjor, Victor Leon-Olmo, Alino Martı́nez-Marcos, Isabel Úbeda‐Bañón

2021npj Parkinson s Disease41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hyposmia is prodromal, and male sex is a risk marker for an enhanced likelihood ratio of Parkinson's disease. The literature regarding olfactory bulb volume reduction is controversial, although the olfactory bulb has been largely reported as an early and preferential site for α-synucleinopathy. These pathological deposits have been correlated with neural loss in Nissl-stained material. However, microgliosis has rarely been studied, and astrogliosis has been virtually neglected. In the present report, α-synucleinopathy (α-synuclein), neurodegeneration (Neu-N), astrogliosis (GFAP), and microgliosis (Iba-1) were quantified, using specific markers and stereological methods. Disease, sex, age, disease duration, and post-mortem interval were considered variables for statistical analysis. No volumetric changes have been identified regarding disease or sex. α-Synucleinopathy was present throughout the OB, mainly concentrated on anterior olfactory nucleus. Neurodegeneration (reduction in Neu-N-positive cells) was statistically significant in the diseased group. Astrogliosis (increased GFAP labeling) and microgliosis (increased Iba-1 labeling) were significantly enhanced in the Parkinson's disease group. When analyzed per sex, neurodegeneration and microgliosis differences are only present in men. These data constitute the demonstration of sex differences in neurodegeneration using specific neural markers, enhanced astrogliosis and increased microgliosis, also linked to male sex, in the human olfactory bulb in Parkinson's disease.

Topics & Concepts

AstrogliosisNeurodegenerationAnterior olfactory nucleusHyposmiaOlfactory bulbGliosisNeurosciencePathologyMedicineParkinson's diseaseBiologyDiseaseCentral nervous systemOlfactory tubercleInfectious disease (medical specialty)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Olfactory and Sensory Function StudiesParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsBiochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques