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EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: 2 NOVEMBER 2000  AT 14:00 ET US
Contact: Ellen O'Brien
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215-349-5659
University of Pennsylvania Medical Center

Evidence links protein damage to Parkinson's

Philadelphia -- New evidence links oxidative damage in a protein found in
nerve cells to the development of degenerative diseases of the nervous
system, such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

 The first study to provide this evidence, conducted by University of
Pennsylvania researchers, will be published in the November 3 issue of Science.

"The protein, called alpha-synuclein, is one of the building blocks of the
brain lesions characteristic in patients with neurodegenerative diseases,"
says Dr. Virginia Lee, who is the John H. Ware III Professor in Alzheimer
Research and  co-director of the Center for Neurodegenerative Disease
Research, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Oxidative damage, she explains, normally occurs when the body's cells are
overwhelmed by molecules that have changed because they have combined
with nitrogen (nitration) or oxygen (oxidation).

Both types of oxidants damage lipids, nucleic acids, proteins, and other
cellular components much like oxidation causes rust damage to metal in
cars and buildings. This damage has been implicated in causing
neurodegenerative disorders.

"We found that alpha-synuclein itself is a target of oxidative stress,
specifically nitration, within these lesions, " says Lee. "This is the first time
anybody has identified nitration on a specific protein."

Neurodegenerative diseases  -- including Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, diffuse
Lewy body disease, and multiple system atrophy -- are collectively called
synucleinopathies.  Most commonly they become symptomatic due to a
deficiency of a specific neurotransmitter -- in the case of Parkinson's it is
dopamine.  When the neurons that produce these chemicals die or become
impaired, which occurs with oxidation, the eventual results are tremors and
sometimes dementia.

"Alpha-synuclein is found at the synapses of nerve cells," explains Lee.
Earlier studies showed that two mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene
cause familial Parkinson's disease, and that this protein is also a major
component of Lewy bodies, the characteristic lesion in Parkinson's
disease.

The University of Pennsylvania scientists conducted a series of
biochemical tests to determine whether nitrated alpha-synucleins are
present, how abundant they are in Lewy bodies, and where they could
be found, as well as in what form.

In determining whether the alpha-synucleins found in Lewy bodies are
specifically nitrated, Lee says she and her colleagues found that, "in fact,
nitrated alpha-synuclein is a widespread and abundant component of
Lewy bodies.  It is also an integral component of the filaments that form
these lesions and are found in the affected brain regions of synucleinopathies."
Lee adds: "This is a major foothold in beginning to understand how oxidative
stress plays a role in causing Parkinson's and other synucleinopathies."
Further studies can help determine the extent of this nitration and find other
possible nitrating agents.

"Our studies provide conclusive evidence of oxidative damage in
alpha-synuclein, and that such stress may be a primary event leading to the
onset and progression of neurodegenerative synucleinopathies, particularly
Parkinson's," says Lee.  "This may pave the way for developing therapies to
stop or slow the oxidative damage, and thus slow or reverse the progression
of these diseases."

In the United States, Parkinson's disease affects over a million people, and
Alzheimer's disease about 4 million people.
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The research was funded by the National Institute on Aging,
the Alzheimer’s Association, and the Oxford Foundation.

Editor’s note: Dr. Lee may be contacted directly at: 215-662-6427

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