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ScienceDaily (Sep. 7, 2008) — In a collaborative study at the University of 
California, San Diego, investigators from neurosciences, chemistry and 
medicine, as well as the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) have 
investigated how proteins involved in neurodegenerative diseases such as 
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease interact to form unique complexes. Their 
findings explain why Alzheimer's patients might develop Parkinson's, and vice 
versa.
The new and unique molecular structures they discovered can now be used to 
model and develop new drugs for these devastating neurological diseases. 
Their findings will be published in the September 3 issue of Public Library 
of Science (PLoS) ONE on September 4, 2008.
The team, led by Eliezer Masliah, M.D., professor of neurosciences and 
pathology in the UC San Diego School of Medicine, found that "fatal" or 
abnormal interactions among the a-synuclein protein (a-syn, involved in 
Parkinson's disease) and Abeta amyloid (Aß, which leads to the plaques 
associated with Alzheimer's disease) interact and form unique "hybrid" 
complexes. These hybrid abnormal protein interactions result in combined 
neurodegenerative diseases.
"Clinically, we knew that having one neurological disease, such as 
Alzheimer's, put patients at risk for another neurological disease in 
combination with it, for example, Parkinson's disease or frontotemporal 
dementia. But as doctors and scientists, we didn't understand why this 
occurred until now," Masliah said. Through computer modeling, they discovered 
that when the Aß and a-syn interacted they formed a new hybrid protein with a 
small hole called a "nanopore" that alters neuronal activity. Masliah 
described the model of the hybrid complex as being "like looking at a boat 
with holes in it. Because we can now see the holes, we can learn how to stop 
the leak."
Misfolding and aggregation of neuronal proteins has been proposed to play a 
critical role in the development of neurodegenerative disorders, including 
the leading disorders in the aging population – Alzheimer's disease and 
Parkinson's disease – which result in dementia and movement disorders. More 
than five million Americans live with such neurological conditions, and it is 
estimated that this country alone will see a 50 percent increase in 
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease alone by the year 2025.
In Alzheimer's, Aß accumulates in the intracellular and extracellular spaces 
of the brain, leading to the formation of plaques. In Parkinson's, 
intracellular accumulation of an abundant synaptic protein, a-syn, results in 
the formation of characteristic foreign substances called "Lewy bodies." The 
mechanisms through which Aß and a-syn interactions might lead to additional 
neurodegeneration have been the subject of intense scientific investigation, 
according to Masliah.
Working with researchers at the SDSC, Masliah and colleagues, including first 
author Igor Tsygelni from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, 
developed a dynamic model using computer simulations. These included the 
so-called "molecular dynamics process," which allows insight into molecular 
motion on an atomic scale. Used to determine the properties of complex 
systems that contain a vast number of particles through use of numerical 
methods, molecular dynamics allowed the team to model how the abnormal 
neuronal proteins docked with other proteins or with cell membranes, and to 
measure the energies of interaction.
"This sort of modeling, to determine the structure of these complexes, was 
never before possible," said Masliah, adding that it was only possible at UC 
San Diego with its strong culture of scientific collaboration and the 
computing power of the San Diego Supercomputer Center. "With this novel 
technology, we have come to a new understanding of these combined 
neurological diseases, and have a model for developing new drugs to treat 
them."
These studies were supported by electron microscopy, along with cell and 
tissue studies of both mice and human brains, to characterize the nature of 
the interaction between the two proteins.
Co-investigators on this paper, all at UC San Diego, include first author Igor 
F. Tsigelny, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the San Diego 
Supercomputer Center; Jason X.-J. Yuan and Oleksandr Platoshyn, Department of 
Medicine; Leslie Crews, Department of Pathology; Paula Desplats, Gideon M. 
Shaked, Hideya Mizuno, Brian Spencer, Edward Rockenstein and Margarita Trejo, 
Department of Neurosciences; and Yuriy Sharikov, San Diego Supercomputer 
Center.
The study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health, IBM under 
its Institutes of Innovation program as well as computational support on its 
BlueGene computers at the San Diego Supercomputer Center and at the Argonne 
National Laboratory.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080903204225.htm

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