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Penn study finds way to prevent protein clumping characteristic of 
Parkinson's disease
August 15, 2008

PHILADELPHIA - Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of 
Medicine have identified a protein from a most unlikely source -- baker's 
yeast -- that might protect against Parkinson's disease. More than a million 
Americans suffer from Parkinson's disease, and no treatments are available 
that fundamentally alter the course of the condition. By introducing the 
yeast protein Hsp104 into animal models of Parkinson's disease, researchers 
prevented protein clumping that leads to nerve cell death characteristic of 
the disorder.

"Yeast express a protein called Hsp104, which is able to reverse protein 
aggregation," says James Shorter, PhD, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry 
and Biophysics. "However, for reasons that are unclear, Hsp104 is not found 
in mammals. We wondered if introducing Hsp104 into mammals could help with 
diseases connected with protein aggregation."

These findings will be published in the September 2008 issue of The Journal 
of Clinical Investigation and appeared online August 14, 2008

Clinicians do not fully understand the process and cause of Parkinson's 
disease. However, researchers believe that a protein called alpha-synuclein 
misfolds and clumps in many forms of the disease, and that this process is 
intimately tied to the selective death of dopamine-producing neurons that 
results in Parkinson's disease.

In this study, researchers found that Hsp104 could partially reverse 
alpha-synuclein aggregation in test-tube experiments. Remarkably, rats 
expressing Hsp104 showed lower levels of alpha-synuclein aggregation and 
alpha-synuclein-induced toxicity of neurons. This result is significant 
because the rat model used recreates the selective loss of 
dopamine-producing nerve cells in the region of the brain affected in 
Parkinson's disease, say the investigators.

"This study represents an important preliminary step," says Shorter. "One 
thing we'd like to do next is to treat an animal model which already has 
considerable quantities of alpha-synuclein aggregates to see if Hsp104 can 
actually reverse the process in the rat brain."

Co-authors in addition to Shorter are Christophe Lo Bianco of the Wallenberg 
Neurosciences Center in Lund, Sweden and the Brain Mind Institute in 
Lausanne, Switzerland; Etienne Regulier, Hilal Lasheul, and Patrick 
Aebischer, also of the Brain Mind Institute; Takeshi Iwatsubo at the 
University of Tokyo; and Susan Lindquist of the Whitehead Institute for 
Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA. The Michael J. Fox Foundation, European 
Molecular Biology Organization, Swedish Parkinson's Foundation, Swiss 
National Science Foundation, American Heart Association, University of 
Pennsylvania Institute on Aging, and the National Institute of Health 
Director's New Innovator Award provided funding for this research.

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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