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The source of this article is the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: 
http://tinyurl.com/dkswn

Scientists Uncover Key Parkinson's Clue

WEDNESDAY, June 29 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers say they've identified a 
mechanism that causes proteins to clump together in the brain cells of 
Parkinson's disease patients, in a finding that could help lead to 
treatments for the illness.

This protein clumping is part of a "vicious cycle," noted researchers at UT 
Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. As the proteins clump together, they 
inhibit an enzyme that normally breaks them down. This leads to the 
formation of even more protein clusters.

"It's a disease involving accumulation of a protein in an aberrant form," 
study senior researcher Dr. Philip Thomas, a professor of physiology, 
explained in a prepared statement

He and his team identified a specific protein, alpha-synuclein, as the 
culprit. Normally, when a cell is stressed, alpha-synuclein unfolds and an 
enzyme degrades the protein into harmless pieces that can't clump together. 
But in people with Parkinson's disease, there's a malfunction in some of 
the degrading enzyme, leaving shortened sections of unfolded 
alpha-synuclein instead of the more harmless pieces.

These intact sections of alpha-synuclein act like "seeds," collecting other 
unfolded sections of the protein around them. It takes only a few molecules 
of such fragments to start the Parkinson's process, the researchers explained.

The study was published in the June 17 issue of The Journal of Biological 
Chemistry.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more 
about Parkinson's disease.



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