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1.
α-Synuclein is the major component of the intracellular Lewy body inclusions present in Parkinson disease (PD) neurons. PD involves the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and the subsequent depletion of dopamine (DA) in the striatum. DA can inhibit α-synuclein fibrillization in vitro and promote α-synuclein aggregation into soluble oligomers. We have studied the mechanism by which DA mediates α-synuclein aggregation into soluble oligomers. Reacting α-synuclein with DA increased the mass of α-synuclein by 64 Da. NMR showed that all four methionine residues were oxidized by DA, consistent with the addition of 64 Da. Substituting all four methionines to alanine significantly reduced the formation of DA-mediated soluble oligomers. The 125YEMPS129 motif in α-synuclein can modulate DA inhibition of α-synuclein fibrillization. However, α-synuclein ending before the 125YEMPS129 motif (residues 1–124) could still form soluble oligomers. The addition of exogenous synthetic YEMPS peptide inhibited the formation of soluble oligomers and resulted in the YEMPS peptide being oxidized. Therefore, the 125YEMPS129 acts as an antioxidant rather than interacting directly with DA. Our study defines methionine oxidation as the dominant mechanism by which DA generates soluble α-synuclein oligomers and highlights the potential role for oxidative stress in modulating α-synuclein aggregation.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanisms that govern the formation of alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) aggregates are not well understood but are considered a central event in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). A critically important modulator of alpha-syn aggregation in vitro is dopamine and other catechols, which can prevent the formation of alpha-syn aggregates in cell-free and cellular model systems. Despite the profound importance of this interaction for the pathogenesis of PD, the processes by which catechols alter alpha-syn aggregation are unclear. Molecular and biochemical approaches were employed to evaluate the mechanism of catechol-alpha-syn interactions and the effect on inclusion formation. The data show that the intracellular inhibition of alpha-syn aggregation requires the oxidation of catechols and the specific noncovalent interaction of the oxidized catechols with residues (125)YEMPS(129) in the C-terminal region of the protein. Cell-free studies using novel near infrared fluorescence methodology for the detection of covalent protein-ortho-quinone adducts showed that although covalent modification of alpha-syn occurs, this does not affect alpha-syn fibril formation. In addition, oxidized catechols are unable to prevent both thermal and acid-induced protein aggregation as well as fibrils formed from a protein that lacks a YEMPS amino acid sequence, suggesting a specific effect for alpha-syn. These results suggest that inappropriate C-terminal cleavage of alpha-syn, which is known to occur in vivo in PD brain or a decline of intracellular catechol levels might affect disease progression, resulting in accelerated alpha-syn inclusion formation and dopaminergic neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

3.
The interplay between dopamine and alpha-synuclein (AS) plays a central role in Parkinson's disease (PD). PD results primarily from a severe and selective devastation of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta. The neuropathological hallmark of the disease is the presence of intraneuronal proteinaceous inclusions known as Lewy bodies within the surviving neurons, enriched in filamentous AS. In vitro, dopamine inhibits AS fibril formation, but the molecular determinants of this inhibition remain obscure. Here we use molecular dynamic (MD) simulations to investigate the binding of dopamine and several of its derivatives onto conformers representative of an NMR ensemble of AS structures in aqueous solution. Within the limitations inherent to MD simulations of unstructured proteins, our calculations suggest that the ligands bind to the (125)YEMPS(129) region, consistent with experimental findings. The ligands are further stabilized by long-range electrostatic interactions with glutamate 83 (E83) in the NAC region. These results suggest that by forming these interactions with AS, dopamine may affect AS aggregation and fibrillization properties. To test this hypothesis, we investigated in vitro the effects of dopamine on the aggregation of mutants designed to alter or abolish these interactions. We found that point mutations in the (125)YEMPS(129) region do not affect AS aggregation, which is consistent with the fact that dopamine interacts non-specifically with this region. In contrast, and consistent with our modeling studies, the replacement of glutamate by alanine at position 83 (E83A) abolishes the ability of dopamine to inhibit AS fibrillization.  相似文献   

4.
The interplay between dopamine and α-synuclein (AS) plays a central role in Parkinson''s disease (PD). PD results primarily from a severe and selective devastation of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta. The neuropathological hallmark of the disease is the presence of intraneuronal proteinaceous inclusions known as Lewy bodies within the surviving neurons, enriched in filamentous AS. In vitro, dopamine inhibits AS fibril formation, but the molecular determinants of this inhibition remain obscure. Here we use molecular dynamic (MD) simulations to investigate the binding of dopamine and several of its derivatives onto conformers representative of an NMR ensemble of AS structures in aqueous solution. Within the limitations inherent to MD simulations of unstructured proteins, our calculations suggest that the ligands bind to the 125YEMPS129 region, consistent with experimental findings. The ligands are further stabilized by long-range electrostatic interactions with glutamate 83 (E83) in the NAC region. These results suggest that by forming these interactions with AS, dopamine may affect AS aggregation and fibrillization properties. To test this hypothesis, we investigated in vitro the effects of dopamine on the aggregation of mutants designed to alter or abolish these interactions. We found that point mutations in the 125YEMPS129 region do not affect AS aggregation, which is consistent with the fact that dopamine interacts non-specifically with this region. In contrast, and consistent with our modeling studies, the replacement of glutamate by alanine at position 83 (E83A) abolishes the ability of dopamine to inhibit AS fibrillization.  相似文献   

5.
Alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) is a major protein component of the neuropathological hallmarks of Parkinson's disease and related neurodegenerative disorders termed synucleinopathies. Neither the mechanism of alpha-syn fibrillization nor the degradative process for alpha-syn has been elucidated. Previously, we showed that wild-type, mutated, and fibrillar alpha-syn proteins are substrates of calpain I in vitro. In this study, we demonstrate that calpain-mediated cleavage near and within the middle region of soluble alpha-syn with/without tyrosine nitration and oxidation generates fragments that are unable to self-fibrillize. More importantly, these fragments prevent full-length alpha-syn from fibrillizing. Calpain-mediated cleavage of alpha-syn fibrils composed of wild-type or nitrated alpha-syn generate C-terminally truncated fragments that retain their fibrillar structure and induce soluble full-length alpha-syn to co-assemble. Therefore, calpain-cleaved soluble alpha-syn inhibits fibrillization, whereas calpain-cleaved fibrillar alpha-syn promotes further co-assembly. These results provide insight into possible disease mechanisms underlying synucleinopathies since the formation of alpha-syn fibrils could be causally linked to the onset/progression of these disorders.  相似文献   

6.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by fibrillary neuronal inclusions called Lewy bodies (LBs) consisting largely of alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn), the protein mutated in some patients with familial PD. The mechanisms of alpha-syn fibrillization and LB formation are unknown, but may involve aberrant degradation or turnover. We examined the ability of calpain I to cleave alpha-syn in vitro. Calpain I cleaved wild-type alpha-syn predominantly after amino acid 57 and within the non-amyloid component (NAC) region. In contrast, calpain I cleaved fibrillized alpha-syn primarily in the region of amino acid 120 to generate fragments like those that increase susceptibility to dopamine toxicity and oxidative stress. Further, while calpain I cleaved wild-type alpha-syn after amino acid 57, this did not occur in mutant A53T alpha-syn. This paucity of proteolysis could increase the stability of A53T alpha-syn, suggesting that calpain I might protect cells from forming LBs by specific cleavages of soluble wild-type alpha-syn. However, once alpha-syn has polymerized into fibrils, calpain I may contribute to toxicity of these forms of alpha-syn by cleaving at aberrant sites within the C-terminal region. Elucidating the role of calpain I in the proteolytic processing of alpha-syn in normal and diseased brains may clarify mechanisms of neurodegenerative alpha-synucleinopathies.  相似文献   

7.
A minor pathway for dopamine oxidation to dopaminochrome, by tyrosinase, is proposed. Characterization of intermediates in this oxidative reaction and stoichiometric determination have both been undertaken. After oxidizing dopamine with mushroom tyrosinase or sodium periodate in a pH range from 6.0 to 7.0, it was spectrophotometrically possible to detect o-dopaminoquinone-H+ as the first intermediate in this pathway. The steps for dopamine transformation to dopaminochrome are as follows: dopamine → o-dopaminequinone-H+o-dopaminequinone → leuko-dopaminochrome → dopaminochrome. No participation of oxygen was detected in the conversion of leukodopaminochrome to dopaminochrome. Scanning spectroscopy and graphical analysis of the obtained spectra also verified that dopaminequinone-H+ was transformed into aminochrome in a constant ratio. The stoichiometry equation for this conversion is 2 o-dopaminequinone-H+ → dopamine + dopaminochrome. The pathway for dopamine oxidation to dopaminochrome by tyrosinase has been studied as a system of various chemical reactions coupled to an enzymatic reaction. A theoretical and experimental kinetic approach is proposed for such a system; this type of mechanism has been named “Enzymatic-chemical-chemical” (EZCC). Rate constants for the implied chemical steps at different pH and temperature values have been evaluated from the measurement of the lag period arising from the accumulation of dopaminochrome that took place when dopamine was oxidized at acid pH. The thermodynamic activation parameters of the chemical steps, the deprotonation of dopaminequinone-H+ to dopaminequinone, and the internal cyclization of dopaminequinone to leukodopaminochrome have been calculated.  相似文献   

8.
Accumulation of alpha-synuclein resulting in the formation of oligomers and protofibrils has been linked to Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia. In contrast, beta-synuclein (beta-syn), a close homologue, does not aggregate and reduces alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn)-related pathology. Although considerable information is available about the conformation of alpha-syn at the initial and end stages of fibrillation, less is known about the dynamic process of alpha-syn conversion to oligomers and how interactions with antiaggregation chaperones such as beta-synuclein might occur. Molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations based on the micelle-derived structure of alpha-syn showed that alpha-syn homodimers can adopt nonpropagating (head-to-tail) and propagating (head-to-head) conformations. Propagating alpha-syn dimers on the membrane incorporate additional alpha-syn molecules, leading to the formation of pentamers and hexamers forming a ring-like structure. In contrast, beta-syn dimers do not propagate and block the aggregation of alpha-syn into ring-like oligomers. Under in vitro cell-free conditions, alpha-syn aggregates formed ring-like structures that were disrupted by beta-syn. Similarly, cells expressing alpha-syn displayed increased ion current activity consistent with the formation of Zn(2+)-sensitive nonselective cation channels. These results support the contention that in Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia, alpha-syn oligomers on the membrane might form pore-like structures, and that the beneficial effects of beta-synuclein might be related to its ability to block the formation of pore-like structures.  相似文献   

9.
Previous studies have shown the presence of nitrated alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) in human Lewy bodies and other alpha-syn inclusions. Herein, the effects of tyrosine nitration on alpha-syn fibril formation, lipid binding, chaperone-like function, and proteolytic degradation were systematically examined by employing chromatographically isolated nitrated monomeric, dimeric, and oligomeric alpha-syn. Nitrated alpha-syn monomers and dimers but not oligomers accelerated the rate of fibril formation of unmodified alpha-syn when present at low concentrations. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that nitrated monomers and dimers are incorporated into the fibrils. However, the purified nitrated alpha-syn monomer by itself was unable to form fibrils. Nitration of the tyrosine residue at position 39 was largely responsible for decreased binding of nitrated monomeric alpha-syn to synthetic vesicles, which correlated with an impairment of the nitrated protein to adopt alpha-helical conformation in the presence of liposomes. The chaperone-like activity of alpha-syn was not inhibited by nitration or oxidation. Furthermore, the 20 S proteasome and calpain I degraded nitrated monomeric alpha-syn, although at a slower rate compared with control alpha-syn. Collectively, these data suggest that post-translational modification of alpha-syn by nitration can promote the formation of intracytoplasmic inclusions that constitute the hallmark of Parkinson disease and other synucleinopathies.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
alpha-Synuclein (alpha-syn) and ubiquitin (Ub) are major protein components deposited in Lewy bodies (LBs) and Lewy neurites, which are pathologic hallmarks of idiopathic Parkinson disease (PD). Almost 90% of alpha-syn in LBs is phosphorylated at serine 129 (Ser(129)). However, the role of Ser(129)-phosphorylated alpha-syn in the biogenesis of LBs remains unclear. Here, we show that compared with coexpression of wild type (WT)alpha-syn and Ub, coexpression of phospho-mimic mutant alpha-syn (S129D) and Ub in neuro2a cells results in an increase of Ub-conjugates and the formation of ubiquitinated inclusions. Furthermore, S129D alpha-syn fails to increase the Ub-conjugates and form ubiquitinated inclusions in the presence of a K63R mutant Ub. In addition, as compared with WT alpha-syn, S129D alpha-syn increased cytoplasmic and neuritic aggregates of itself in neuro2a cells treated with H(2)O(2) and serum deprivation. These results suggest that the contribution of Ser(129)-phosphorylated alpha-syn to the Lys(63)-linked Ub-conjugates and aggregation of itself may be involved in the biogenesis of LBs in Parkinson disease and other related synucleinopathies.  相似文献   

12.
alpha-Synuclein (alpha-syn) phosphorylation at serine 129 is characteristic of Parkinson disease (PD) and related alpha-synulceinopathies. However, whether phosphorylation promotes or inhibits alpha-syn aggregation and neurotoxicity in vivo remains unknown. This understanding is critical for elucidating the role of alpha-syn in the pathogenesis of PD and for development of therapeutic strategies for PD. To better understand the structural and molecular consequences of Ser-129 phosphorylation, we compared the biochemical, structural, and membrane binding properties of wild type alpha-syn to those of the phosphorylation mimics (S129E, S129D) as well as of in vitro phosphorylated alpha-syn using a battery of biophysical techniques. Our results demonstrate that phosphorylation at Ser-129 increases the conformational flexibility of alpha-syn and inhibits its fibrillogenesis in vitro but does not perturb its membrane-bound conformation. In addition, we show that the phosphorylation mimics (S129E/D) do not reproduce the effect of phosphorylation on the structural and aggregation properties of alpha-syn in vitro. Our findings have significant implications for current strategies to elucidate the role of phosphorylation in modulating protein structure and function in health and disease and provide novel insight into the underlying mechanisms that govern alpha-syn aggregation and toxicity in PD and related alpha-synulceinopathies.  相似文献   

13.
Amyloid plaques are hallmark neuropathological lesions in Alzheimer's disease, which consist of abnormally aggregated Abeta protein. Multiple Abeta aggregated species have been identified, and neurotoxicity appears to be correlated with the amount of nonfibrillar oligomers. Therefore, selective inhibition of Abeta oligomer formation has emerged as an attractive means of therapeutic intervention. To investigate whether small molecules can modulate aggregation to achieve selective inhibition of neurotoxic amyloid oligomers, Abeta aggregation was assayed in vitro in the presence of methylene blue, using immunoreactivity with the prefibrillar oligomer-specific antibody A11, transmission electron microscopy, and turbidity assays. Methylene blue inhibited oligomerization when used at substoichiometric concentrations relative to that of the Abeta monomer. Inhibition of Abeta oligomerization was achieved concomitant with promotion of fibrillization, suggesting that oligomer and fibril formation are distinct and competing pathways. Methylene blue-mediated promotion of fiber formation occurred via a dose-dependent decrease in the lag time and an increase in the fibrillization rate, consistent with promotion of both filament nucleation and elongation. Addition of methylene blue to preformed oligomers resulted in oligomer loss and promotion of fibrillization. The data show that Abeta oligomer formation is inhibited by promoting fibril formation, which suggests that the relative pathological significance of oligomers and fibrils may be tested in vivo using methylene blue. If Abeta oligomers represent the primary pathogenic species, then inhibition of this highly toxic species via promotion of formation of less toxic aggregates may be therapeutically useful.  相似文献   

14.
The autoxidation and enzymatic catabolism of dopamine results in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which may possibly contribute to oxidative stress in multiple neurodegenerative disorders. Recent studies indicate that proteasome inhibition occurs in numerous neurodegenerative conditions, possibly as the result of oxidative stress, although the effects of dopamine on proteasome activity have not been determined. In the present study we examined the effects of dopamine on proteasome activity in the neural PC12 cell line. Application of dopamine induced a dose- and time-dependent decrease in proteasome activity, which occurred prior to cell death. Application of an antioxidant (gluthathione monoethyl ester), monoamine oxidase inhibitors (deprenyl, clogyline, paragyline), or an inhibitor of dopamine uptake (nomifensine) attenuated dopamine toxicity and dopamine-induced proteasome impairment. Application of the proteasome inhibitor lactacystin increased the toxicity of dopamine and the levels of protein oxidation following administration of dopamine. Together, these data indicate that dopamine induces proteasome inhibition that is dependent, in part, on ROS and dopamine uptake, and suggest a possible role for proteasome inhibition in dopamine toxicity.  相似文献   

15.
This study was aimed at establishing the interaction between dopamine and nitric oxide and elucidating the mechanistic aspects inherent in this interaction. At high (*) NO concentrations (microM range), dopamine underwent nitrosation with subsequent nitration. Nitrosation is proposed to occur via a nucleophilic attack to N(2)O(3) by dopamine. At low (*) NO concentrations (microM range), dopaminochrome was formed. EPR spin stabilization studies showed the occurrence of two o-semiquinone intermediates during dopaminochrome formation. Heats of formation obtained by AM1 semiempirical calculations supported the formation of the two o-semiquinone species. Hydroxyl radicals were detected by spin trapping EPR, and experiments performed with superoxide dismutase and catalase suggested that peroxynitrite was the source of HO(*). A mechanism is presented that considers the several factors influencing these reactions.  相似文献   

16.
The amyloid hypothesis suggests that the process of amyloid-beta protein (Abeta) fibrillogenesis is responsible for triggering a cascade of physiological events that contribute directly to the initiation and progression of Alzheimer's disease. Consequently, preventing this process might provide a viable therapeutic strategy for slowing and/or preventing the progression of this devastating disease. A promising strategy to achieve prevention of this disease is to discover compounds that inhibit Abeta polymerization and deposition. Herein, we describe a new class of small molecules that inhibit Abeta aggregation, which is based on the chemical structure of apomorphine. These molecules were found to interfere with Abeta1-40 fibrillization as determined by transmission electron microscopy, Thioflavin T fluorescence and velocity sedimentation analytical ultracentrifugation studies. Using electron microscopy, time-dependent studies demonstrate that apomorphine and its derivatives promote the oligomerization of Abeta but inhibit its fibrillization. Preliminary structural activity studies demonstrate that the 10,11-dihydroxy substitutions of the D-ring of apomorphine are required for the inhibitory effectiveness of these aporphines, and methylation of these hydroxyl groups reduces their inhibitory potency. The ability of these small molecules to inhibit Abeta amyloid fibril formation appears to be linked to their tendency to undergo rapid autoxidation, suggesting that autoxidation product(s) acts directly or indirectly on Abeta and inhibits its fibrillization. The inhibitory properties of the compounds presented suggest a new class of small molecules that could serve as a scaffold for the design of more efficient inhibitors of Abeta amyloidogenesis in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Dopaminochrome formation is catalyzed by commercially available purified peroxidases (EC 1.11.1.7) such as horseradish, lacto- and myelo-peroxidase using dopamine, hydrogen peroxide or promethazine sulfoxide as substrates. A rat brain fraction (RBF) catalyzes a similar reaction and its catalytic power increases after preincubation with hydrogen peroxide/ascorbic acid. The activity of both the purified enzymes and the RBF preparation is inhibited by carnosine and characterized by excess substrate inhibition. The enzymes recognize different substrates but show the highest affinity for dopamine. The RBF fraction is strongly buffered against oxidation by compounds such as glutathione and by bioreductive enzymes such as DT-diaphorase (EC 1.6.99.2) which can use as a substrate menadione or dopaminochrome. The rat brain dopamine peroxidizing activity appeared to be mostly bound to the synaptosomal fraction. The reaction catalyzed by the purified peroxidases was followed by electron spin resonance spectroscopy and, unlike that catalyzed by RBF, was shown to produce the signal of a transient dopamine-o-semiquinone radical.  相似文献   

18.
Alzheimer's disease is defined in part by the intraneuronal aggregation of tau protein into filamentous lesions. The pathway is accompanied by posttranslational modifications including phosphorylation and glycation, each of which has been shown to promote tau fibrillization in vitro when present at high stoichiometry. To clarify the site-specific impact of posttranslational modification on tau fibrillization, the ability of recombinant full-length four repeat tau protein (htau40) and 11 pseudophosphorylation mutants to fibrillize in the presence of anionic inducer was assayed in vitro using transmission electron microscopy and laser light scattering assays. Tau glycated with d-glucose was examined as well. Both glycated tau and pseudophosphorylation mutants S199E, T212E, S214E, double mutant T212E/S214E, and triple mutant S199E/S202E/T205E yielded increased filament mass at equilibrium relative to wild-type tau. Increases in filament mass correlated strongly with decreases in critical concentration, indicating that both pseudophosphorylation and glycation promoted fibrillization by shifting equilibrium toward the fibrillized state. Analysis of reaction time courses further revealed that increases in filament mass were not associated with reduced lag times, indicating that these posttranslational modifications did not promote filament nucleation. The results suggest that site-specific posttranslational modifications can stabilize filaments once they nucleate, and thereby support their accumulation at low intracellular tau concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
The heat shock protein Hsp104 has been reported to possess the ability to modulate protein aggregation and toxicity and to “catalyze” the disaggregation and recovery of protein aggregates, including amyloid fibrils, in yeast, Escherichia coli, mammalian cell cultures, and animal models of Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease. To provide mechanistic insight into the molecular mechanisms by which Hsp104 modulates aggregation and fibrillogenesis, the effect of Hsp104 on the fibrillogenesis of amyloid beta (Aβ) was investigated by characterizing its ability to interfere with oligomerization and fibrillogenesis of different species along the amyloid-formation pathway of Aβ. To probe the disaggregation activity of Hsp104, its ability to dissociate preformed protofibrillar and fibrillar aggregates of Aβ was assessed in the presence and in the absence of ATP. Our results show that Hsp104 inhibits the fibrillization of monomeric and protofibrillar forms of Aβ in a concentration-dependent but ATP-independent manner. Inhibition of Aβ fibrillization by Hsp104 is observable up to Hsp104/Aβ stoichiometric ratios of 1:1000, suggesting a preferential interaction of Hsp104 with aggregation intermediates (e.g., oligomers, protofibrils, small fibrils) on the pathway of Aβ amyloid formation. This hypothesis is consistent with our observations that Hsp104 (i) interacts with Aβ protofibrils, (ii) inhibits conversion of protofibrils into amyloid fibrils, (iii) arrests fibril elongation and reassembly, and (iv) abolishes the capacity of protofibrils and sonicated fibrils to seed the fibrillization of monomeric Aβ. Together, these findings suggest that the strong inhibition of Aβ fibrillization by Hsp104 is mediated by its ability to act at different stages and target multiple intermediates on the pathway to amyloid formation.  相似文献   

20.
Li HT  Lin DH  Luo XY  Zhang F  Ji LN  Du HN  Song GQ  Hu J  Zhou JW  Hu HY 《The FEBS journal》2005,272(14):3661-3672
Fibrillization of alpha-synuclein (alpha-Syn) is closely associated with the formation of Lewy bodies in neurons and dopamine (DA) is a potent inhibitor for the process, which is implicated in the causative pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). To elucidate any molecular mechanism that may have biological relevance, we tested the inhibitory abilities of DA and several analogs including chemically synthetic and natural polyphenols in vitro. The MS and NMR characterizations strongly demonstrate that DA and its analogs inhibit alpha-Syn fibrillization by a mechanism where the oxidation products (quinones) of DA analogs react with the amino groups of alpha-Syn chain, generating alpha-Syn-quinone adducts. It is likely that the amino groups of alpha-Syn undergo nucleophilic attack on the quinone moiety of DA analogs to form imino bonds. The covalently cross-linked alpha-Syn adducts by DA are primarily large molecular mass oligomers, while those by catechol and p-benzoquinone (or hydroquinone) are largely monomers or dimers. The DA quinoprotein retains the same cytotoxicity as the intact alpha-Syn, suggesting that the oligomeric intermediates are the major elements that are toxic to the neuronal cells. This finding implies that the reaction of alpha-Syn with DA is relevant to the selective dopaminergic loss in PD.  相似文献   

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