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Featured researches published by Anna Stieber.


Neuron | 2011

Exogenous α-Synuclein Fibrils Induce Lewy Body Pathology Leading to Synaptic Dysfunction and Neuron Death

Laura A. Volpicelli-Daley; Kelvin C. Luk; Tapan P. Patel; Selcuk A. Tanik; Dawn M. Riddle; Anna Stieber; David F. Meaney; John Q. Trojanowski; Virginia M.-Y. Lee

Inclusions composed of α-synuclein (α-syn), i.e., Lewy bodies (LBs) and Lewy neurites (LNs), define synucleinopathies including Parkinsons disease (PD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). Here, we demonstrate that preformed fibrils generated from full-length and truncated recombinant α-syn enter primary neurons, probably by adsorptive-mediated endocytosis, and promote recruitment of soluble endogenous α-syn into insoluble PD-like LBs and LNs. Remarkably, endogenous α-syn was sufficient for formation of these aggregates, and overexpression of wild-type or mutant α-syn was not required. LN-like pathology first developed in axons and propagated to form LB-like inclusions in perikarya. Accumulation of pathologic α-syn led to selective decreases in synaptic proteins, progressive impairments in neuronal excitability and connectivity, and, eventually, neuron death. Thus, our data contribute important insights into the etiology and pathogenesis of PD-like α-syn inclusions and their impact on neuronal functions, and they provide a model for discovering therapeutics targeting pathologic α-syn-mediated neurodegeneration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Exogenous α-synuclein fibrils seed the formation of Lewy body-like intracellular inclusions in cultured cells

Kelvin C. Luk; Cheng Song; Patrick O'Brien; Anna Stieber; Jonathan R. Branch; Kurt R. Brunden; John Q. Trojanowski; Virginia M.-Y. Lee

Cytoplasmic inclusions containing α-synuclein (α-Syn) fibrils, referred to as Lewy bodies (LBs), are the signature neuropathological hallmarks of Parkinsons disease (PD). Although α-Syn fibrils can be generated from recombinant α-Syn protein in vitro, the production of fibrillar α-Syn inclusions similar to authentic LBs in cultured cells has not been achieved. We show here that intracellular α-Syn aggregation can be triggered by the introduction of exogenously produced recombinant α-Syn fibrils into cultured cells engineered to overexpress α-Syn. Unlike unassembled α-Syn, these α-Syn fibrils “seeded” recruitment of endogenous soluble α-Syn protein and their conversion into insoluble, hyperphosphorylated, and ubiquitinated pathological species. Thus, this cell model recapitulates key features of LBs in human PD brains. Also, these findings support the concept that intracellular α-Syn aggregation is normally limited by the number of active nucleation sites present in the cytoplasm and that small quantities of α-Syn fibrils can alter this balance by acting as seeds for aggregation.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2007

α-Synuclein–induced Aggregation of Cytoplasmic Vesicles in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

James H. Soper; Subhojit Roy; Anna Stieber; Eliza Lee; Robert B. Wilson; John Q. Trojanowski; Christopher G. Burd; Virginia M.-Y. Lee

Aggregated alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) fibrils form Lewy bodies (LBs), the signature lesions of Parkinsons disease (PD) and related synucleinopathies, but the pathogenesis and neurodegenerative effects of LBs remain enigmatic. Recent studies have shown that when overexpressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, alpha-syn localizes to plasma membranes and forms cytoplasmic accumulations similar to human alpha-syn inclusions. However, the exact nature, composition, temporal evolution, and underlying mechanisms of yeast alpha-syn accumulations and their relevance to human synucleinopathies are unknown. Here we provide ultrastructural evidence that alpha-syn accumulations are not comprised of LB-like fibrils, but are associated with clusters of vesicles. Live-cell imaging showed alpha-syn initially localized to the plasma membrane and subsequently formed accumulations in association with vesicles. Imaging of truncated and mutant forms of alpha-syn revealed the molecular determinants and vesicular trafficking pathways underlying this pathological process. Because vesicular clustering is also found in LB-containing neurons of PD brains, alpha-syn-mediated vesicular accumulation in yeast represents a model system to study specific aspects of neurodegeneration in PD and related synucleinopathies.


American Journal of Pathology | 2004

Dysregulation of Stathmin, a Microtubule-Destabilizing Protein, and Up-Regulation of Hsp25, Hsp27, and the Antioxidant Peroxiredoxin 6 in a Mouse Model of Familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Christoph W. Strey; Daniel Spellman; Anna Stieber; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Xiaosong Wang; John D. Lambris; Nicholas K. Gonatas

Gain-of-function mutations of the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) gene cause dominantly inherited familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The identification of differentially regulated proteins in spinal cords of paralyzed mice expressing SOD1(G93A) may contribute to understanding mechanisms of toxicity by mutant SOD1. Protein profiling showed dysregulation of Stathmin with a marked decrease of its most acidic and phosphorylated isoform, and up-regulation of heat shock proteins 25 and 27, peroxiredoxin 6, phosphatidylinositol transfer protein-alpha, apolipoprotein E, and ferritin heavy chain. Stathmin accumulated in the cytoplasm of 30% of spinal cord motor neurons with fragmented Golgi apparatus. Overexpression of Stathmin in HeLa cells was associated with collapse of microtubule networks and Golgi fragmentation. These results, together with the decrease of one Stathmin isoform, suggest a role of the protein in Golgi fragmentation. Mutant SOD1 co-precipitated and co-localized with Hsp25 in neurons and astrocytes. Mutant SOD1 may thus deprive cells of the anti-apoptotic and other protective activities of Hsp25. Astrocytes contained peroxiredoxin 6, a unique nonredundant antioxidant. The up-regulation of peroxiredoxin 6 probably constitutes a defense to oxidative stress induced by SOD1(G93A). Direct effects of SOD1(G93A) or sequential reactions triggered by the mutant may cause the protein changes.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2000

Aggregation of ubiquitin and a mutant ALS-linked SOD1 protein correlate with disease progression and fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus

Anna Stieber; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Nicholas K. Gonatas

Transgenic mice that express the G93A mutation of human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1(G93A)), found in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS), showed clinical symptoms and histopathological changes of sporadic ALS, including fragmentation of the neuronal Golgi apparatus (GA). The finding of fragmented neuronal GA in asymptomatic mice, months before the onset of paralysis, suggests that the GA is an early target of the pathological processes causing neuronal degeneration. Transgenic mice expressing human SOD1(G93A) have aggregates of mutant protein and ubiquitin in neuronal and glial cytoplasm; they appeared first in the neuropil and later in the perikarya of motor neurons, where they were adjacent to fragmented GA. The aggregates of SOD1(G93A) appeared in neuronal perikarya of asymptomatic mice containing fragmented GA. The numbers of neurons with deposits of SOD1(G93A) and fragmented GA progressively increased with age. Immuno-electron microscopy using colloidal gold showed labeling of ubiquitin and SOD1 over 13 nm thick cytoplasmic filaments. Spinal cord extracts showed a 20-fold increase of SOD1(G93A) in transgenic mice compared to the wild-type protein in controls. The results suggest a causal relationship between the aggregation of mutant SOD1 and ubiquitin, fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus of motor neurons and neurodegeneration.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2000

Aggregates of mutant protein appear progressively in dendrites, in periaxonal processes of oligodendrocytes, and in neuronal and astrocytic perikarya of mice expressing the SOD1G93A mutation of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Anna Stieber; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Nicholas K. Gonatas

Mice expressing the G93A and other mutations of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1(G93A)) are valid models for the familial form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) with SOD1 mutations and, probably, for sporadic ALS. Adult mice become progressively paralyzed and show most of the histopathological lesions reported in sporadic ALS, i.e. neuronal loss, astrogliosis, ubiquitin and Lewy body-like inclusions, dystrophic axons and fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus (GA) of motor neurons. In transgenic mice, the mutant protein and ubiquitin aggregate within pathological 13 nm thick filaments [Stieber A, Gonatas JO, Gonatas NK. J Neurol Sci 2000;173:53-62]. This immunocytochemical and quantitative study of mice expressing SOD1(G93A) establishes the chronological order and cellular localization of aggregates of SOD1 and their correlation with fragmentation of the GA. Young asymptomatic mice expressing SOD1(G93A) showed aggregates of mutant SOD1 within neurites, prior to the detection of SOD1 in the perikarya of spinal cord motor neurons and astrocytes. Both dendrites and the periaxonal oligodendroglial cytoplasm, surrounding atrophic axons, contained SOD1 as revealed by immunoelectron microscopy The perikarya of a small percentage of spinal cord motor neurons contained both fragmented GA and aggregates of SOD1; however, about 50% of motor neurons with fragmented GA did not contain SOD1 in the perikaryon, suggesting that aggregates of mutant protein may not directly cause fragmentation of the GA. The mechanism of the putative toxic effect by the mutant protein remains to be clarified. The isolation and biochemical characterization of the filamentous aggregates of mutant protein and ubiquitin from spinal cords of transgenic mice expressing mutations of the SOD1 gene may offer clues on pathogenetic mechanisms.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1998

The fragmented neuronal Golgi apparatus in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis includes the trans-Golgi-network: functional implications.

Anna Stieber; Youjun Chen; Shuang Wei; Zissimos Mourelatos; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Koichi Okamoto; Nicholas K. Gonatas

Abstract The Golgi apparatus (GA) of spinal cord motor neurons is fragmented in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and in asymptomatic and symptomatic transgenic mice expressing the G93A mutation of the gene of the human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase, found in certain cases of familial ALS (FALS) [Gonatas NK (1994) Am J Pathol 145 : 751–761; Mourelatos Z, et al. (1996) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93 : 5472–5477]. A similar fragmentation of the GA has been described in cells treated with microtubule-depolymerizing drugs, where the organelle is functional and contains both Golgi stacks and trans-Golgi network (TGN), the compartment of exit and targeting of proteins processed by the GA. To gain a better definition of the structure of the fragmented neuronal GA in ALS, four cases of sporadic ALS with numerous Bunina bodies in spinal cord motor neurons were stained with antibodies against human TGN and against the lumenal and cytoplasmic domains of MG160, a protein of the medial cisternae of the GA. The fragmented GA was stained with the three antibodies, indicating the presence of both Golgi stacks and TGN. Furthermore, the staining of the fragmented GA by the antiserum against the cytoplasmic domain of MG160 indicates that the fragmentation of the GA is not the result of a terminal and global cytoplasmic lytic event. The Bunina bodies were not stained by the anti-MG160 antibodies, suggesting that they are not derived from the GA. The perikarya of neurons with fragmented GA showed normal immunoreactivity with antibodies against the heavy neurofilament subunit and α-tubulin. However, because of the lack of appropriate antibodies the localization of proteins such as spectrin, ankyrin, centractin and others which link the microtubules with the GA were not done. The findings support the hypothesis that, in ALS, the fragmented neuronal GA is functional. Additional work with animal models of ALS may establish whether the fragmentation of the GA is a sign of early degeneration or a compensatory reaction of the injured motor neuron.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 1998

The involvement of the Golgi apparatus in the pathogenesis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, and ricin intoxication

Nicholas K. Gonatas; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Anna Stieber

Abstract Several diseases involving a variety of cells and tissues are associated with defective enzymes of the Golgi apparatus (GA). An intact GA of neurons is crucial for the physiological function of axons and presynaptic terminals since proteins destined for fast axoplasmic transport are processed by the organelle. Despite the obvious importance of the GA of neurons, its function and involvement in pathological reactions have not been studied systematically. The purpose of this paper is to draw attention to the contribution of the neuronal GA in pathology using two paradigms: (1) the involvement of the neuronal GA in the pathogeneses of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), in an animal model of ALS, and in Alzheimer’s disease; and (2) the elucidation of a retrograde transport pathway involving the neuronal trans-golgi network, in vitro and in vivo, and the participation of this pathway in the toxicity and/or endocytosis of ricin and other toxic or non-toxic ligands.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2013

TDP-43 skeins show properties of amyloid in a subset of ALS cases

John L. Robinson; Felix Geser; Anna Stieber; Mfon Umoh; Linda K. Kwong; Vivianna M. Van Deerlin; Virginia M.-Y. Lee; John Q. Trojanowski

Aggregation of TDP-43 proteins to form intracellular inclusions is the primary pathology in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) with TDP-43 inclusions (FTLD-TDP). Histologically, in the cerebral cortex and limbic regions of affected ALS and FTLD-TDP patients, these pathologies occur as a variety of cytoplasmic, neuritic and intranuclear TDP-43 inclusions. In the spinal cord and lower brainstem of ALS patients, the lesions form cytoplasmic dashes or complex filamentous and spherical profiles in addition to skein-like inclusions (SLI). Ultrastructurally, the morphology of TDP-43 inclusions is heterogeneous but mainly composed of loose bundles of 10- to 20-nm-diameter straight filaments associated with electron-dense granular material. All of these TDP-43 inclusions are generally described as disordered amorphous aggregations unlike the amyloid fibrils that characterize protein accumulations in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. We here report that Thioflavin-S positive SLI are present in a subset of ALS cases, while TDP-43 inclusions outside the spinal cord lack the chemical properties of amyloid. Further, we examine the differential enrichment of fibrillar profiles in SLI of ALS cases by TDP-43 immuno-electron microscopy (immuno-EM). The demonstration that pathological TDP-43 can be amyloidogenic in situ suggests the following conclusions: (1) the conformational changes associated with TDP-43 aggregation are more complex than previously thought; (2) Thioflavin-S positive SLI may be composed primarily of filamentous ultrastructures.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2004

Disruption of the structure of the Golgi apparatus and the function of the secretory pathway by mutants G93A and G85R of Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Anna Stieber; Jacqueline O. Gonatas; Jonni S. Moore; Andrew Bantly; H.-S. Yim; M.B. Yim; Nicholas K. Gonatas

The Golgi apparatus of motor neurons (GA) is fragmented in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), in familial ALS with SOD1 mutations, and in mice that express SOD1G93A of familial ALS, in which it was detected months before paralysis. In paralyzed transgenic mice expressing SOD1G93A or SOD1G85R, mutant proteins aggregated not only in the cytoplasm of motor neurons, but also in astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. Furthermore, aggregation of the G85R protein damaged astrocytes and was associated with rapidly progressing disease. In order to gain insight into the functional state of the fragmented GA, we examined the effects of S0D1 mutants G93A and G85R in Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells (CHO). In contrast to cells expressing the wt and G93A, the G85R expressers had no SOD1 activity. However, cells expressing both mutants, and to a lesser degree the wt, showed decreased survival, fragmentation of the GA, and dysfunction of the secretory pathway, which was assessed by measuring the amount of cell surface co-expressed CD4, a glycoprotein processed through the GA. The G93A and wt proteins were partially recovered in detergent insoluble fractions; while the recovery of G85R was minimal. Both mutants showed equal reductions of cell survival and function of the secretory pathway, in comparison to the wt and cells expressing mutant alsin, a protein found in rare cases of fALS. These results are consistent with the conclusion that the two SOD1 mutants, by an unknown mechanism, promote the dispersion of the GA and the dysfunction of the secretory pathway. This and other in vitro models of mutant SOD1 toxicity may prove useful in the elucidation of pathogenetic mechanisms.

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Youjun Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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Bin Zhang

University of Pennsylvania

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Linda K. Kwong

University of Pennsylvania

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