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Single-cell sequencing of human midbrain reveals glial activation and a Parkinson-specific neuronal state.

Updated August 4, 2023

Idiopathic Parkinson's disease is characterized by a progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons, but the exact disease aetiology remains largely unknown. To date, Parkinson's disease research has mainly focused on nigral dopaminergic neurons, although recent studies suggest disease-related changes also in non-neuronal cells and in midbrain regions beyond the substantia nigra. While there is some evidence for glial involvement in Parkinson's disease, the molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to characterize the contribution of all cell types of the midbrain to Parkinson's disease pathology by single-nuclei RNA sequencing and to assess the cell type-specific risk for Parkinson's disease using the latest genome-wide association study. We profiled >41 000 single-nuclei transcriptomes of post-mortem midbrain from six idiopathic Parkinson's disease patients and five age-/sex-matched controls. To validate our findings in a spatial context, we utilized immunolabelling of the same tissues. Moreover, we analysed Parkinson's disease-associated risk enrichment in genes with cell type-specific expression patterns. We discovered a neuronal cell cluster characterized by CADPS2 overexpression and low TH levels, which was exclusively present in idiopathic Parkinson's disease midbrains. Validation analyses in laser-microdissected neurons suggest that this cluster represents dysfunctional dopaminergic neurons. With regard to glial cells, we observed an increase in nigral microglia in Parkinson's disease patients. Moreover, nigral idiopathic Parkinson's disease microglia were more amoeboid, indicating an activated state. We also discovered a reduction in idiopathic Parkinson's disease oligodendrocyte numbers with the remaining cells being characterized by a stress-induced upregulation of S100B. Parkinson's disease risk variants were associated with glia- and neuron-specific gene expression patterns in idiopathic Parkinson's disease cases. Furthermore, astrocytes and microglia presented idiopathic Parkinson's disease-specific cell proliferation and dysregulation of genes related to unfolded protein response and cytokine signalling. While reactive patient astrocytes showed CD44 overexpression, idiopathic Parkinson's disease microglia revealed a pro-inflammatory trajectory characterized by elevated levels of IL1B, GPNMB and HSP90AA1. Taken together, we generated the first single-nuclei RNA sequencing dataset from the idiopathic Parkinson's disease midbrain, which highlights a disease-specific neuronal cell cluster as well as 'pan-glial' activation as a central mechanism in the pathology of the movement disorder. This finding warrants further research into inflammatory signalling and immunomodulatory treatments in Parkinson's disease.

Anne GrünewaldLuxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4362 Esch-sur-Alzetteanne.gruenewald@uni.lu
Malte SpielmannMax Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, D-14195 Berlinspielman@molgen.mpg.de
Semra Smajić1
Cesar A Prada-Medina2
Zied Landoulsi1
Jenny Ghelfi1
Sylvie Delcambre1
Carola Dietrich2
Javier Jarazo1
Jana Henck2
Saranya Balachandran3
Sinthuja Pachchek1
Christopher M Morris4
Paul Antony1
Bernd Timmermann2
Sascha Sauer5
Sandro L Pereira1
Jens C Schwamborn1
Patrick May1
Anne Grünewald (Principal Investigator)6
Malte Spielmann (Principal Investigator)7
1Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4362 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.
2Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.
3Institute of Human Genetics, Kiel University, D-42118 Kiel, Germany.
4Newcastle Brain Tissue Resource, Translational and Clinical Research Institute, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, NE1 7RU Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
5Max-Delbrück-Centrum für Molekulare Medizin, Genomics Group, D-13125 Berlin, Germany.
6Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4362 Esch-sur-Alzette
7Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, D-14195 Berlin
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To reference this project, please use the following link:

https://explore.data.humancellatlas.org/projects/739ef78a-ba5d-4487-a013-9982db66d222
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GEO Series Accessions:

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Analysis Portals

None

Project Label

GrNewald-Human-10x3pv3

Species

Homo sapiens

Sample Type

specimens

Anatomical Entity

brain

Organ Part

midbrain

Selected Cell Types

Unspecified

Disease Status (Specimen)

2 disease statuses

Disease Status (Donor)

2 disease statuses

Development Stage

human adult stage

Library Construction Method

10x 3' v3

Nucleic Acid Source

single nucleus

Paired End

false

Analysis Protocol

analysis_protocol_1, analysis_protocol_2

File Format

3 file formats

Cell Count Estimate

41.4k

Donor Count

11
fastq.gz36 file(s)tar.gz3 file(s)xlsx1 file(s)