Squid Studies Suggest New Route to Therapy for ALS, Targeting Synaptic Dysfunction

Contact: dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-685-3525 

WOODS HOLE, Mass. -- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is one of the most devastating adult-onset neurodegenerative diseases. Patients, including the late actor/playwright Sam Shepard, become progressively weaker and eventually paralyzed as their motor neurons degenerate and die.

To find a cure for ALS, which is fatal, scientists need a deeper understanding of how it interrupts motor neuron communication channels. Because motor neurons reach from the brain to the spinal cord, and from the spinal cord to the muscles, when they die, the brain can no longer initiate muscle movement.

Yuyu Song at the Marine Biological Laboratory. Yuyu Song at the Marine Biological Laboratory.

 of Harvard Medical School was a  at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) when she took advantage of a powerful research organism in neuroscience, the local squid, to start asking how a mutant protein associated with familial ALS behaves under controlled conditions.

Her study, recently published in , clarifies the mechanisms underlying neural dysfunction in ALS, and also suggests a novel approach to restoring the health of motor neurons in patients with the disease.

Restoring neurotransmission

Song focused on how this mutant protein, called G85R-SOD1, affects neurotransmission at the squid “giant synapse,” the junction where neurons transmit chemical signals to muscle fibers, causing the muscle to contract. The squid giant synapse is one of the few mature nervous systems that mimics human neuromuscular junctions, while allowing precise experimental manipulations and live measurements.

Song showed that the presence of misfolded mutant SOD1 inhibits synaptic transmission and diminishes the pool of synaptic vesicles, whose job is to deliver neurotransmitters critical for neuronal connections.

Surprisingly, synaptic function was restored by intermittent, high-frequency stimulation, which suggested aberrant calcium signaling may underlie SOD1 toxicity to normal synaptic transmission. To test this hypothesis, Song used calcium imaging to capture the abnormal calcium influx in the presynaptic terminal and confirmed the protective role of a calcium chelator, which corrected the calcium imbalance without affecting neurotransmission.

This suggests a new approach to therapeutic intervention for ALS, in which chemical or electrical regulation of calcium and its downstream signaling pathways may restore the health of motor neurons.

“Altogether, our results not only demonstrated synaptic dysfunction related to ALS and its underlying molecular pathways, but also extended our understanding of fundamental synaptic physiology,” Song says.

Developing a novel disease model - and finding a family

Song, who is an MD-PhD, has spent numerous summers at the ǧƵ using the local squid to unravel the basic pathologies underlying neurodegenerative disease. She started coming regularly in 2007 as a graduate student with , whose lab was developing the squid’s giant axon (nerve fiber) as a system for studying human disease.

“One summer, I chatted with  at the ǧƵ, who has been doing synaptic recordings in the squid for many decades,” Song says. “I helped his lab with some electron microscopy on the squid giant synapse together with , and Rodolfo challenged/encouraged me to do synaptic studies myself. In the summer of 2013, I decided to establish the squid giant synapse as a disease model for ALS and to learn electrophysiology in this classical preparation.”

The Woods Hole squid, Doryteuthis pealeii, aboard the ǧƵ collecting boat, The Gemma. Credit: Daniel Cojanu A catch of the Woods Hole squid, Doryteuthis pealeii, aboard the ǧƵ collecting boat, The Gemma. Credit: Daniel Cojanu

That same summer, Song met Whitman Center scientists Steve Zottoli, George Augustine and , who advised her to apply for a , in which she could set up an independent research project at MBL. After her productive Grass Lab experience, Song returned to the ǧƵ for several years as a Whitman Center scientist and .

Song found an enduring family at the ǧƵ, she says. “The are still in touch with one another and we share our success and struggle in life and science together,” she says. The Grass Lab’s directors and administrators remain dear friends. And she is quick to acknowledge the essential contribution of the ǧƵ’s collecting operation, which provides a daily catch of squid to her and other MBL scientists in season. “All the crew in the Marine Resources Center feel like family, not just scientific collaborators,” she says.

Currently, Song is an instructor in neurology at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. And she is waiting – like so many researchers –for the green light to return to Woods Hole!

Citation:

Song, Yuyu (2020) Synaptic Actions of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis-Associated G85R-SOD1 in the Squid Giant Synapse. eNeuro, DOI: 

Homepage image: The longfin inshore squid (Doryteuthis pealeii). Credit: Roger Hanlon

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The Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the ǧƵ is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the .