Print

Print


     http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/

  Important Clue To The Cause Of Parkinson's Disease Discovered
ScienceDaily (Jan. 2, 2008) — A glitch in the mechanism by which cells recycle 
damaged components may trigger Parkinson's disease, according to a study by 
scientists at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. 
The research could lead to new strategies for treating Parkinson's and other 
neurodegenerative diseases.
All cells depend on a surveillance system known as autophagy (which literally 
means "self eating") to digest and recycle the damaged molecules that arise 
as cells age. In autophagy, defective proteins and other molecules are 
transported to membrane-bound sacs called lysosomes. After attaching to the 
lysosomal membrane, the molecules enter the lysosome, where they are digested 
by enzymes. This cleanup process may be particularly important for nerve 
cells, which generate defective molecules more rapidly than most other types 
of cells. When autophagy is impaired, toxic compounds can accumulate and 
cause cell death.
"It is widely suspected that accumulation of a particular protein, known as 
alpha-synuclein, within affected nerve cells of Parkinson's disease patients 
contributes to the death of these cells," says Dr. Ana Maria Cuervo, senior 
author of the article and associate professor of anatomy & structural biology 
at Einstein.
Dr. Cuervo previously showed that mutant forms of alpha-synuclein--found in 
the five to 10 percent of patients who have familial Parkinson's disease--are 
poorly digested via autophagy and also block the breakdown of other 
substances. While these alpha-synuclein mutations are rare, other 
modifications of alpha-synuclein--phosphorylated and oxidized forms, for 
example--can be found in the brains of all Parkinson's disease patients.
In this study, Dr. Cuervo and her colleagues looked at how several different 
modified forms of alpha-synuclein affected autophagy in vitro and in tissue 
culture. One particular modification of alpha-synuclein was found to 
interfere with autophagy: the compound created by the interaction of 
alpha-synuclein with dopamine, the main neurotransmitter produced by the 
nerve cells damaged in Parkinson's disease.
"Alpha-synuclein molecules modified by dopamine bound tightly to the lysosomal 
membrane, but they got stuck there and weren't effectively transported into 
the lysosome," says Dr. Cuervo. As a result, the alpha-synuclein molecules 
altered by dopamine were poorly degraded, and the presence of these molecules 
on the lysosomal membranes interfered with autophagic digestion of other 
compounds as well.
"We propose that inhibition of autophagy caused by dopamine's alteration of 
alpha-synuclein could explain the selective death of dopamine-producing nerve 
cells in Parkinson's disease," says Dr. Cuervo, who notes that interference 
with autophagy has also been implicated in other neurodegenerative diseases 
including Alzheimer's.
"By devising strategies for boosting autophagy in nerve cells or suppressing 
the chemical reactions that interfere with the autophagy--by lowering alpha 
synuclein expression, for example--we may be able to treat patients afflicted 
with these conditions," she says.
This research appears in the January 2 advance online issue of The Journal of 
Clinical Investigation.
Other Einstein scientists involved in the research were lead author Marta 
Martinez-Vicente, Susmita Kaushik, Ashish Massey and Dr. Antonia Follenzi. 
This work also included collaborators from Columbia University, the 
University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard Medical School.
Adapted from materials provided by Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

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