Print

Print


Yeast Model Yields Insights into Parkinson's Disease

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
Thursday, December 4, 2003
2:00 p.m. Eastern Time

 CONTACT:
Margo Warren or Paul Girolami
(301) 496-5751

YEAST MODEL YIELDS INSIGHTS INTO PARKINSON’S DISEASE

Scientists who developed the first yeast model of Parkinson’s disease (PD) have been able to describe the mechanisms of
an important gene’s role in the disease. Tiago Fleming Outeiro, Ph.D., and Susan Lindquist, Ph.D., of the Whitehead
Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts, studied the gene’s actions under normal conditions and
under abnormal conditions to learn how and when the gene’s product, alpha-synuclein, becomes harmful to surrounding
cells. The scientists created a yeast model that expresses the alpha-synuclein gene, which has been implicated in
Parkinson’s disease (PD). Yeast models are often used in the study of genetic diseases because they offer researchers a
simple system that allows them to clarify how genes work.

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, part of the National Institutes of Health, funded the
study, which appears in the December 5, 2003, issue of Science. ¹

The alpha-synuclein protein, which is found broadly in the brain, has been implicated in several neurodegenerative
disorders. Sometimes a mutation or a misfolding of the protein causes the problems; other times there are too many
copies of the normal gene. A study earlier this year reported that patients with a rare familial form of PD had too
many normal copies of the alpha-synuclein gene, which resulted in a buildup of protein inside brain cells, causing the
symptoms of PD.

Drs. Outeiro and Lindquist conducted their study by creating one yeast that expresses wild type synuclein, using the
normal gene, and another yeast that expresses two mutant forms, using a mutated version of the gene found in patients
with PD.

One theory for the cause of PD is that an aging brain no longer has the capacity to cope with accumulating or
misfolding proteins. A normal healthy brain has the ability to clear out excess or mutant proteins through a process
known as the quality control system. In the yeast model of PD, when the scientists doubled the expression of the alpha-
synuclein gene it “profoundly changed” the fate of the yeast’s quality control system, and alpha-synuclein appeared in
large clumps of cells (inclusion bodies). This did not happen when they studied the actions of a single copy of the
wild type synuclein. These inclusion bodies have a toxic effect that causes cell death and neurodegeneration.

“Just a twofold difference in expression was sufficient to cause a catastrophic change in behavior,” the scientists
report in their paper.

“These changes may give insight into important changes that happen when alpha-synuclein is overexpressed in Parkinson’s
patients,” said Diane Murphy, Ph.D., a program director at the NINDS. “Dr. Lindquist is well known for her studies of
yeast models of prion disease, and we are delighted she has extended her research to the important field of Parkinson’s
disease.”

PD is the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s disease and is thought to affect 500,000
Americans.

The NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke leads Federal efforts to conduct and support basic
and clinical research on diseases of the brain and central nervous system. The agencies are part of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services.

¹“Yeast Cells Provide Insight into Alpha-Synuclein Biology and Pathobiology,” Outeiro, T.F. and Lindquist, S. Science,
Vol. 302, pp. 1772-1775.

SOURCE: National Institutes of Health (press release), United States
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/dec2003/ninds-04.htm

* * *

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn