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1.
6-Hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) is widely used to produce animal models of Parkinson's disease (PD) by selectively destroying the nigro-striatal dopaminergic systems, but selective toxicity of 6-OHDA towards dopaminergic cells in vitro remains controversial. Mutant (A30P and A53T) alpha-synuclein isoforms cause increased vulnerability of cells towards various toxic insults and enhance dopamine transporter (DAT)-mediated toxicity of the selective dopaminergic neurotoxin and mitochondrial complex I inhibitor MPP(+) in vitro. Here we extend our recent studies on DAT-mediated toxicity to elucidate the mechanisms involved in selective dopaminergic toxicity of 6-OHDA. We studied the cytotoxicity as well as the toxic mechanisms of 6-OHDA in human embryonic kidney HEK-293 cells ectopically co-expressing mutant alpha-synucleins and the human DAT protein. 6-OHDA showed half-maximal toxic concentration (TC(50)) of 88 microM in HEK-hDAT cells without alpha-synuclein expression after 24 h, whereas the TC(50) values significantly decreased to 58 and 39 microM by expression of A30P and A53T alpha-synuclein, respectively. alpha-Synuclein expression did not affect 6-OHDA toxicity in HEK-293 cells not expressing the DAT. Analysis of intracellular parameters of cellular energy metabolism revealed that the co-expression of mutant alpha-synucleins in HEK-hDAT cells accelerates the reduction of intracellular net ATP levels and ATP/ADP ratios induced by 6-OHDA. Uptake function of the DAT was not altered by expression of alpha-synuclein isoforms. Our data suggest a mechanism of 6-OHDA-induced dopaminergic toxicity involving an interaction of mutant alpha-synucleins with the DAT molecule and subsequent acceleration of cellular energy depletion that might be relevant for the pathogenesis of PD.  相似文献   

2.
Human wild type (WT) and mutant alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) genes were overexpressed using a Tet-on expression system in stably transfected dopaminergic MN9D cells. Their overexpression induced caspase-independent and dopamine-related apoptosis not rescued by general caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK. While apoptosis due to overexpression of WT alpha-syn was completely abrogated by a specific tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) inhibitor, alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (alpha-MT), the inhibitor only partially rescued apoptosis caused by overexpression of alpha-syn mutants. In addition, overexpression of mutants enhanced the toxicity of 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) and 6-hydroxyldopamine (6-OHDA) to MN9D cells, whereas overexpression of WT protected MN9D cells against MPP+ toxicity, but not against 6-OHDA. We conclude that WT alpha-syn is beneficial to dopaminergic neurons but its overexpression in the presence of endogenous dopamine makes it a potential threat to the cells. In contrast, mutant alpha-syn not only caused the loss of WT protective function but also the gain-of-toxicity which becomes more serious in the presence of dopamine and neurotoxins.  相似文献   

3.
Recent findings suggest that gonadal steroid hormones are neuroprotective and may provide clinical benefits in delaying the development of Parkinson's disease. In this report we investigated the ability of oestradiol to protect mesencephalic dopaminergic neurones cultured in serum-free or serum-supplemented medium from toxicity induced by 6-hydroxydopamine or 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP+). The efficiency of both toxins and oestradiol was evaluated by tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunocytochemistry, [3H]dopamine ([3H]DA) uptake, length of dopaminergic processes and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release measurement. In cultures grown in serum-supplemented medium, a 2-h pre-treatment with high concentrations (10-100 microM) of 17beta-oestradiol or 17alpha-oestradiol, the stereoisomer with weak oestrogenic activity, protected both dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic neurones from toxicity induced by 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA; 40 or 100 microM) and by the high MPP+ concentrations (50 microM) necessary to obtain significant neuronal death under those culture conditions. At these concentrations, MPP+ was no longer selective for dopaminergic neurones but affected all cells present in the culture. In contrast, the hormonal treatments did not protect against selective degeneration of dopaminergic neurones induced by lower MPP+ concentrations (below 10 microM), related to inhibition of complex I of respiratory chain. In cultures grown in serum-free medium, oestradiol concentrations higher than 1 microM induced neuronal degeneration and no protection against 6-OHDA or MPP+ toxicity was observed at lower concentrations of the steroid. The neuroprotective effects of 17alpha- or 17beta-oestradiol evidenced in this model might be due to the antioxidant properties of these compounds. However, other non-genomic effects of the steroids cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

4.
Dopaminergic neurons in cultures of dissociated cells from fetal rat mesencephalon were exposed to the principal metabolite of the neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), 1-methyl-4-phenyl-pyridinium ion (MPP+), and several of its structural analogues. At concentrations between 0.01 and 0.1 microM, MPP+ inhibited catecholamine accumulation as visualized by cytofluorescence. Between 0.1 and 10.0 microM, MPP+ resulted in disappearance of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity without affecting other cells in the cultures. At concentrations higher than 10 microM, MPP+ was toxic to all cells present in the cultures. The effect of low concentrations of MPP+ on catecholamine cytofluorescence of the dopaminergic neurons was partially reversible. The intermediate concentrations produced irreversible structural changes of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive cells, resulting in complete disappearance of these neurons. The morphological changes were specific to the dopaminergic neurons and were not evident in other cells viewed with phase contrast microscopy. Of the structural analogues tested, the 1-ethyl analogue of MPP+ was effective in selectively destroying dopaminergic neurons in our culture system. The antioxidants L-acetyl-carnitine, beta-carotene, and alpha-tocopherol failed to protect against MPP+ neurotoxicity when co-incubated with the toxin.  相似文献   

5.
The molecular and biochemical mode of cell death of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease (PD) is uncertain. In an attempt at further clarification we studied the effects of 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+), the active metabolite of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), on dopaminergic PC12 cells. In humans and nonhuman primates MPTP/MPP+ causes a syndrome closely resembling PD. MPP+ toxicity is thought to be mediated by the block of complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Treatment of undifferentiated PC12 cells with MPP+ primarily inhibited proliferation of PC12 cells and secondarily led to cell death after the depletion of all energy substrates by glycolysis. This cell death showed no morphological characteristics of apoptosis and was not blocked by treatment with caspase inhibitors. The inhibition of cell growth was not dependent on an inhibition of complex I activity since MPP+ also inhibited cell proliferation in SH-SY5Y cells lacking mitochondrial DNA and complex I activity (p0 cells). As shown by flow cytometric analysis, MPP+ induced a block in the G0/G1 to S phase transition that correlated with increased expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAF1/Cip1) and growth arrest. Since treatment with 1 microM MPP+ caused apoptotic cell death in p21(WAF1/Cip1)-deficient (p21(-/-)) but not in parental (p21(+/+)) mouse embryo fibroblasts, our data suggest that in an early phase MPP+-induced p21(WAF1/Cip1) expression leads to growth arrest and prevents apoptosis until energy depletion finally leads to a nonapoptotic cell death.  相似文献   

6.
Selective dopaminergic neurotoxicity induced by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridine (MPP+) is believed to be due to the transmembrane uptake by the dopamine transporter and subsequent inhibition of mitochondrial complex I and/or production of free radicals. However, little is known about the molecular sequence of intracellular events leading to cell death induced by low concentrations of MPP+. Here we stably express the human dopamine transporter (hDAT) in human embryonic kidney HEK-293 cells to correlate cytotoxicity and indices of cellular energy metabolism after exposure to low concentrations of MPP+. The permanent ektopic expression of hDAT in HEK-293 cells confers time and dose-dependent cytotoxicity at nanomolar concentrations of MPP+ with an IC50 value of 740 nM after 48 h. MPP+ initially induces a fast increase of cellular NADH content within the first 6 h, followed by a slow reduction of intracellular ATP (IC50 value of 690 nM after 48 h) as well as reduction of intracellular ATP/ADP ratio. These changes of cellular energy metabolism precede reduction of cell viability. The toxic effects of MPP+ are blocked by the hDAT inhibitor GBR12909 with EC50 values of 110 and 60 nM for cytotoxicity and ATP depletion, respectively. Antioxidants such as D-alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid do not have significant protective effects against MPP+ toxicity. This study shows that HEK-293 cells expressing the hDAT gene are highly sensitive to MPP+ due to (i) transmembrane uptake of MPP+ by the dopamine transporter, (ii) cellular energy depletion, probably caused by inhibition of mitochondrial complex I activity and (iii) that the toxicity is independent from the presence of antioxidants. This cell system may serve as a screening system for endogenous and exogenous compounds with similar effects compared to MPP+ as well as protective agents.  相似文献   

7.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurologic disorder characterized by dopaminergic cell death in the substantia nigra. PD pathogenesis involves mitochondrial dysfunction, proteasome impairment, and alpha-synuclein aggregation, insults that may be especially toxic to oxidatively stressed cells including dopaminergic neurons. The enzyme methionine sulfoxide reductase A (MsrA) plays a critical role in the antioxidant response by repairing methionine-oxidized proteins and by participating in cycles of methionine oxidation and reduction that have the net effect of consuming reactive oxygen species. Here, we show that MsrA suppresses dopaminergic cell death and protein aggregation induced by the complex I inhibitor rotenone or mutant alpha-synuclein, but not by the proteasome inhibitor MG132. By comparing the effects of MsrA and the small-molecule antioxidants N-acetylcysteine and vitamin E, we provide evidence that MsrA protects against PD-related stresses primarily via methionine sulfoxide repair rather than by scavenging reactive oxygen species. We also demonstrate that MsrA efficiently reduces oxidized methionine residues in recombinant alpha-synuclein. These findings suggest that enhancing MsrA function may be a reasonable therapeutic strategy in PD.  相似文献   

8.
Fan GH  Zhou HY  Yang H  Chen SD 《FEBS letters》2006,580(13):3091-3098
Alpha-synuclein has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). Heat shock proteins (HSPs) can reduce protein misfolding and accelerate the degradation of misfolded proteins. 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP+) is the compound responsible for the PD-like neurodegeneration caused by MPTP. In this study, we found that MPP+ could increase the expression of alpha-synuclein mRNA but could not elevate proteasome activity sufficiently, leading to alpha-synuclein protein accumulation followed by aggregation. Both HSPs and HDJ-1, a homologue of human Hsp40, can inhibit MPP+-induced alpha-synuclein mRNA expression, promote ubiquitination and elevate proteasome activity. These findings suggest that HSPs may inhibit the MPP+-induced alpha-synuclein expression, accelerate alpha-synuclein degradation, thereby reducing the amount of alpha-synuclein protein and accordingly preventing its aggregation.  相似文献   

9.
Insights into the etiology and pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease may derive from elucidation of the neurotoxic mechanisms of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) and its active metabolite, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+). In previous studies, MPP+ provoked oxidation of cytochrome b and K+ leakage into the extracellular space of rat striatal slices. Magnitudes of these time-dependent responses were far greater than expected had the MPP+ effects been limited to dopaminergic terminals. To determine whether cytochromes become oxidized from K(+)-induced increases in ion transport activity or from electron transport inhibition at complex I, oxygen consumption was measured because this should be increased by the former and decreased by the latter mechanism. Low MPP+ concentrations (1 microM) decreased O2 consumption (approximately 40% in 3 h) in striatal slices. This decrease was diminished by mazindol and did not occur in hippocampal slices. High toxin concentrations (100 microM) inhibited oxygen consumption to a greater extent (approximately 60%) in striatal slices; this inhibition was still greater in hippocampal slices. These results support the hypothesis that acute effects of low ("selective") MPP+ concentrations require the presence of dopaminergic terminals to trigger a sequence of destructive metabolic events but that the metabolic consequences of MPP+ spread to neighboring cells. In contrast, high MPP+ concentrations nonselectively inhibit metabolic and ion transport activity without requiring the presence of dopaminergic terminals. These results also suggest that physiological effects of "selective" MPP+ concentrations extend to nondopaminergic cells.  相似文献   

10.
Altered glutamatergic neurotransmission appears to be central to the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease; consequently, considerable effort has been made to elucidate neuroprotective mechanisms against such toxicity. In the present study, the possible neuroprotective effect of glutamate receptor antagonists against MPP+ neurotoxicity on dopaminergic terminals of rat striatum was investigated. Different doses of glutamate receptor antagonists were coinfused with 1.5 microg of MPP+ into the striatum; kynurenic acid, a nonselective antagonist of glutamate receptors (30 and 60 nmol), partially protected dopaminergic terminal degeneration in terms of rescue of dopamine levels and tyrosine hydroxylase immunohistochemistry. Dizocilpine, a channel blocker of the NMDA receptor (1, 4, and 8 nmol), and 7-chlorokynurenic acid, a selective antagonist at the glycine site of the NMDA receptor (1 and 10 nmol), failed to protect dopaminergic terminals from MPP+ toxicity. However, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (0.5 and 1 nmol) and 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfamoylbenzo(f)quinoxaline (1 nmol), two AMPA-kainate receptor antagonists, protected against MPP toxicity. Our findings suggest that the toxic effects of MPP+ on dopaminergic terminals are not mediated through a direct interaction with the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor, but with the AMPA-kainate subtype.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the ability of pramipexole, a dopamine agonist used in the symptomatic treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD), to protect against cell death induced by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) and rotenone in dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic cells. Pre-incubation with either the active (-)- or inactive (+)-enantiomer forms of pramipexole (10 microm) decreased cell death in response to MPP+ and rotenone in dopaminergic SHSY-5Y cells and in non-dopaminergic JK cells. The protective effect was not prevented by dopamine receptor blockade using sulpiride or clozapine. Protection occurred at concentrations at which pramipexole did not demonstrate antioxidant activity, as shown by the failure to maintain aconitase activity. However, pramipexole reduced caspase-3 activation, decreased the release of cytochrome c and prevented the fall in the mitochondrial membrane potential induced by MPP+ and rotenone. This suggests that pramipexole has anti-apoptotic actions. The results extend the evidence for the neuroprotective effects of pramipexole and indicate that this is not dependent on dopamine receptor occupation or antioxidant activity. Further evaluation is required to determine whether the neuroprotective action of pramipexole is translated to a disease-modifying effect in PD patients.  相似文献   

12.
Two cysteine protease families, caspase and calpain, are known to participate in cell death. We investigated whether a stress-specific protease activation pathway exists, and to what extent Bcl-2 plays a role in preventing drug-induced protease activity and cell death in a dopaminergic neuronal cell line, MN9D. Staurosporine (STS) induced caspase-dependent apoptosis while a dopaminergic neurotoxin, MPP(+) largely induced caspase-independent necrotic cell death as determined by morphological and biochemical criteria including cytochrome c release and fluorogenic caspase cleavage assay. At the late stage of both STS- and MPP(+)-induced cell death, Bax was cleaved into an 18-kDa fragment. This 18-kDa fragment appeared only in the mitochondria-enriched heavy membrane fraction of STS-treated cells, whereas it was detected exclusively in the cytosolic fraction of MPP(+)-treated cells. This proteolytic cleavage of Bax appeared to be mediated by calpain as determined by incubation with [(35)S]methionine-labelled Bax. Thus, cotreatment of cells with calpain inhibitor blocked both MPP(+)- and STS-induced Bax cleavage. Intriguingly, overexpression of baculovirus-derived inhibiting protein of caspase, p35 or cotreatment of cells with caspase inhibitor blocked STS- but not MPP(+)-induced Bax cleavage. This appears to indicate that calpain activation may be either dependent or independent of caspase activation within the same cells. However, cotreatment with calpain inhibitor rescued cells from MPP(+)-induced but not from STS-induced neuronal cell death. In these paradigms of dopaminergic cell death, overexpression of Bcl-2 prevented both STS- and MPP(+)-induced cell death and its associated cleavage of Bax. Thus, our results suggest that Bcl-2 may play a protective role by primarily blocking drug-induced caspase or calpain activity in dopaminergic neuronal cells.  相似文献   

13.
Parkinson's disease is a debilitating neurodegenerative disease characterized by loss of midbrain dopaminergic neurons. These neurons are particularly sensitive to the neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+), the active metabolite of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), which causes parkinsonian syndromes in humans, monkeys and rodents. Although apoptotic cell death has been implicated in MPTP/MPP+ toxicity, several recent studies have challenged the role of caspase-dependent apoptosis in dopaminergic neurons. Using the midbrain-derived MN9D dopaminergic cell line, we found that MPP+ treatment resulted in an active form of cell death that could not be prevented by caspase inhibitors or over-expression of a dominant negative inhibitor of apoptotic protease activating factor 1/caspase-9. Apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) is a mitochondrial protein that may mediate caspase-independent forms of regulated cell death following its translocation to the nucleus. We found that MPP+ treatment elicited nuclear translocation of AIF accompanied by large-scale DNA fragmentation. To establish the role of AIF in MPP+ toxicity, we constructed a DNA vector encoding a short hairpin sequence targeted against AIF. Reduction of AIF expression by RNA interference inhibited large-scale DNA fragmentation and conferred significant protection against MPP+ toxicity. Studies of primary mouse midbrain cultures further supported a role for AIF in caspase-independent cell death in MPP+-treated dopaminergic neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Uptake of the Parkinsonism-inducing toxin, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP(+)), into dopaminergic terminals is thought to block Complex I activity leading to ATP loss and overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The present study indicates that MPP(+)-induced ROS formation is not mitochondrial in origin but results from intracellular dopamine (DA) oxidation. Although a mean lethal dose of MPP(+) led to ROS production in identified dopaminergic neurons, toxic doses of the Complex I inhibitor rotenone did not. Concurrent with ROS formation, MPP(+) redistributed vesicular DA to the cytoplasm prior to its extrusion from the cell by reverse transport via the DA transporter. MPP(+)-induced DA redistribution was also associated with cell death. Depleting cells of newly synthesized and/or stored DA significantly attenuated both superoxide production and cell death, whereas enhancing intracellular DA content exacerbated dopaminergic sensitivity to MPP(+). Lastly, depleting cells of DA in the presence of succinate completely abolished MPP(+)-induced cell death. Thus, MPP(+) neurotoxicity is a multi-component process involving both mitochondrial dysfunction and ROS generated by vesicular DA displacement. These results suggest that in the presence of a Complex I defect, misregulation of DA storage could lead to the loss of nigrostriatal neurons in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

15.
Pan T  Fei J  Zhou X  Jankovic J  Le W 《Life sciences》2003,72(9):1073-1083
As antioxidants, polyphenols are considered to be potentially useful in preventing chronic diseases in man, including Parkinson's disease (PD), a disease involving dopamine (DA) neurons. Our studies have demonstrated that polyphenols extracted from green tea (GT) can inhibit the uptake of 3H-dopamine (3H-DA) and 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP(+)) by DA transporters (DAT) and partially protect embryonic rat mesencephalic dopaminergic (DAergic) neurons from MPP(+)-induced injury. The inhibitory effects of GT polyphenols on 3H-DA uptake were determined in DAT-pCDNA3-transfected Chinese Hamster Ovary (DAT-CHO) cells and in striatal synaptosomes of C57BL/6 mice in vitro and in vivo. The inhibitory effects on 3H-MPP(+) uptake were determined in primary cultures of embryonic rat mesencephalic DAergic cells. Inhibition of uptake for both 3H-DA and 3H-MPP(+) was dose-dependent in the presence of polyphenols. Incubation with 50 microM MPP(+) resulted in a significant loss of tyrosine-hydroxylase (TH)-positive cells in the primary embryonic mesencephalic cultures, while pretreatment with polyphenols (10 to 30 microg/ml) or mazindol (10 microM), a classical DAT inhibitor, significantly attenuated MPP(+)-induced loss of TH-positive cells. These results suggest that GT polyphenols have inhibitory effects on DAT, through which they block MPP(+) uptake and protect DAergic neurons against MPP(+)-induced injury.  相似文献   

16.
Establishment of a Parkinson's disease (PD) neuron model was attempted with mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. ES cell lines over-expressing mouse nuclear receptor-related 1 (Nurr1), together with human wild-type and alanine 30 --> proline (A30P) and alanine 53 --> threonine (A53T) mutant alpha-synuclein were established and subjected to differentiation into dopaminergic neurons. The ES cell-derived dopaminergic neurons expressing wild-type or mutant alpha-synuclein exhibited the fundamental characteristics consistent with dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. The ES cell-derived PD model neurons exhibited increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, proteasome inhibition, and mitochondrial inhibition. Cell viability of PD model neurons and the control neurons was similar until 28 days after differentiation. Nonetheless, after that time, PD model neurons gradually began to undergo neuronal death over the course of 1 month, showing cytoplasmic aggregate formation and an increase of insoluble alpha-synuclein protein. Such delayed neuronal death was observed in a mutant alpha-synuclein protein level-dependent manner, which was slightly inhibited by a c-jun N-terminal kinase inhibitor and a caspase inhibitor. Such cell death was not observed when the same ES cell lines were differentiated into oligodendrocytes. The ES cell-derived PD model neurons are considered as prospective candidates for a new prototype modelling PD that would allow better investigation of the underlying neurodegenerative pathophysiology.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated the effect of the selective dopaminergic neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) on glutathione redox status and the generation of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) in rat pheochromocytoma PC 12 cells in vitro. Treatment with MPP+ (250 microM) led to a 63% increase of reduced glutathione (GSH) after 24 h, while a 10-fold higher concentration of MPP+ (2.5 mM) depleted cellular GSH to 12.5% of control levels within that time. Similarly, the complex I-inhibitor rotenone induced a time-dependent loss of GSH at 1 and 10 microM, whereas treatment with lower concentrations of rotenone (0.1, 0.01 microM) increased cellular GSH. Both MPP+ and rotenone increased cellular levels of oxidised glutathione (GSSG) and the higher concentrations of both compounds led to an elevated ratio of oxidised glutathione (GSSG) vs total glutathione (GSH + GSSG) indicating a shift in cellular redox balance. MPP+ or rotenone did not induce the generation of ROI or significant elevation of intracellular levels of thiobabituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) for up to 48 h. Our data suggest that MPP+ has differential effects on glutathione homeostasis depending on the degree of complex I-inhibition and that inhibition of complex I is not sufficient to generate ROI in this paradigm.  相似文献   

18.
Alpha-synuclein, a protein implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease (PD), is thought to affect mitochondrial functions, although the mechanisms of its action remain unclear. In this study we show that the N-terminal 32 amino acids of human alpha-synuclein contain cryptic mitochondrial targeting signal, which is important for mitochondrial targeting of alpha-synuclein. Mitochondrial imported alpha-synuclein is predominantly associated with the inner membrane. Accumulation of wild-type alpha-synuclein in the mitochondria of human dopaminergic neurons caused reduced mitochondrial complex I activity and increased production of reactive oxygen species. However, these defects occurred at an early time point in dopaminergic neurons expressing familial alpha-synuclein with A53T mutation as compared with wild-type alpha-synuclein. Importantly, alpha-synuclein that lacks mitochondrial targeting signal failed to target to the mitochondria and showed no detectable effect on complex I function. The PD relevance of these results was investigated using mitochondria of substantia nigra, striatum, and cerebellum of postmortem late-onset PD and normal human brains. Results showed the constitutive presence of approximately 14-kDa alpha-synuclein in the mitochondria of all three brain regions of normal subjects. Mitochondria of PD-vulnerable substantia nigra and striatum but not cerebellum from PD subjects showed significant accumulation of alpha-synuclein and decreased complex I activity. Analysis of mitochondria from PD brain and alpha-synuclein expressing dopaminergic neuronal cultures using blue native gel electrophoresis and immunocapture technique showed the association of alpha-synuclein with complex I. These results provide evidence that mitochondrial accumulated alpha-synuclein may interact with complex I and interfere with its functions.  相似文献   

19.
The angiogenic factor, angiogenin, has been recently linked to both Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Parkinson Disease (PD). We have recently shown that endogenous angiogenin levels are dramatically reduced in an alpha-synuclein mouse model of PD and that exogenous angiogenin protects against cell loss in neurotoxin-based cellular models of PD. Here, we extend our studies to examine whether activation of the prosurvival Akt pathway is required for angiogenin''s neuroprotective effects against 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+), as observed in ALS models, and to test the effect of virally-mediated overexpression of angiogenin in an in vivo PD model. Using a dominant negative Akt construct, we demonstrate that inhibition of the Akt pathway does not reduce the protective effect of angiogenin against MPP+ toxicity in the dopaminergic SH-SY5Y cell line. Furthermore, an ALS-associated mutant of angiogenin, K40I, which fails to induce Akt phosphorylation, was similar to wildtype angiogenin in protection against MPP+. These results confirm previous work showing neuroprotective effects of angiogenin against MPP+, and indicate that Akt is not required for this protective effect. We also investigated whether adeno-associated viral serotype 2 (AAV2)-mediated overexpression of angiogenin protects against dopaminergic neuron loss in the 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model. We found that angiogenin overexpression using this approach does not reduce the MPTP-induced degeneration of dopaminergic cells in the substantia nigra, nor limit the depletion of dopamine and its metabolites in the striatum. Together, these findings extend the evidence for protective effects of angiogenin in vitro, but also suggest that further study of in vivo models is required to translate these effects into meaningful therapies.  相似文献   

20.
We established previously that alpha-synuclein displayed a protective anti-apoptotic phenotype in neurons, mainly by down-regulating p53-dependent caspase-3 activation (Alves da Costa, C., Ancolio, K., and Checler, F. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 24065-24069; Alves da Costa, C., Paitel, E., Vincent, B., and Checler, F. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 50980-50984). This function was abolished by Parkinson disease-linked pathogenic mutations and by the dopaminergic toxin, 6-hydroxydopamine (6OH-DOPA) (Alves da Costa, C., Paitel, E., Vincent, B., and Checler, F. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 50980-50984). However, the mechanisms by which 6OH-DOPA interfered with alpha-synuclein function remained unclear. Here we showed that 6OH-DOPA prevents alpha-synuclein-mediated anti-apoptotic function by altering its degradation. Thus, 6OH-DOPA treatment of TSM1 neurons and SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells enhances endogenous alpha-synuclein-like immunoreactivity and inhibits the catabolism of endogenous and recombinant alpha-synucleins by purified 20 S proteasome. Furthermore, we demonstrated that 6OH-DOPA directly inhibits endogenous proteasomal activity in TSM1 and SH-SY5Y cells and also blocks purified proteasome activity in vitro. This inhibitory effect can be prevented by the anti-oxidant phenyl-N-butylnitrone. We also established that 6OH-DOPA triggers the aggregation of recombinant alpha-synuclein in vitro. Therefore, we conclude that 6OH-DOPA abolishes alpha-synuclein anti-apoptotic phenotype by inhibiting its proteasomal degradation, thereby increasing its intracellular concentration and potential propensity to aggregation, the latter phenomenon being directly exacerbated by 6OH-DOPA itself. Interestingly, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP(+)), another toxin inducer of Parkinson disease-like pathology, does not affect alpha-synuclein protective function and fails to trigger aggregation of recombinant alpha-synuclein. Furthermore, MPP(+) does not alter cellular proteasomal activity, and only high concentrations of the toxin affect purified 20 S proteasome by a mechanism that remains insensitive to phenyl-N-butylnitrone. The drastically distinct effects of 6OH-DOPA and MPP(+) on alpha-synuclein function are discussed with respect to Parkinson disease pathology and animal models mimicking this pathology.  相似文献   

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