Microglial activation and alpha-synuclein oligomers drive the early inflammatory phase of Parkinson’s disease
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterised by insoluble α-synuclein (αSyn) aggregates in Lewy bodies (LBs) within the substantia nigra, with cortical pathology appearing as the disease progresses. Late-stage LB deposition, cellular stress, and neuronal loss obscure disease-driving events, we therefore performed multi-regional transcriptomic and aggregate profiling in early-midstage PD brains (Braak 3–4), where cortical regions are pathologically unaffected. We report neuroimmune activation as an early PD feature, characterised by the expansion of a high- SNCA -expressing microglial state. This robust immune signature occurs prior to LB formation, but is associated with oligomeric αSyn within cortical microglia. In hiPSC-derived microglia, both endogenous αSyn oligomerisation, and exogenous oligomer uptake, trigger transcriptional reprogramming, characterised by interferon-driven inflammation, antigen presentation, and mitochondrial suppression, closely mirroring the early PD brain. These findings describe mechanisms by which αSyn oligomerisation potently initiates early neuroinflammation, highlighting a critical interplay between proteinopathy and immune activation at the earliest stages of disease.