The Parkinson's disease protein α-synuclein disrupts cellular Rab homeostasis
- 8 January 2008
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (1) , 145-150
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0710685105
Abstract
Alpha-Synuclein (alpha-syn), a protein of unknown function, is the most abundant protein in Lewy bodies, the histological hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD). In yeast alpha-syn inhibits endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-Golgi (ER-->Golgi) vesicle trafficking, which is rescued by overexpression of a Rab GTPase that regulates ER-->Golgi trafficking. The homologous Rab1 rescues alpha-syn toxicity in dopaminergic neuronal models of PD. Here we investigate this conserved feature of alpha-syn pathobiology. In a cell-free system with purified transport factors alpha-syn inhibited ER-->Golgi trafficking in an alpha-syn dose-dependent manner. Vesicles budded efficiently from the ER, but their docking or fusion to Golgi membranes was inhibited. Thus, the in vivo trafficking problem is due to a direct effect of alpha-syn on the transport machinery. By ultrastructural analysis the earliest in vivo defect was an accumulation of morphologically undocked vesicles, starting near the plasma membrane and growing into massive intracellular vesicular clusters in a dose-dependent manner. By immunofluorescence/immunoelectron microscopy, these clusters were associated both with alpha-syn and with diverse vesicle markers, suggesting that alpha-syn can impair multiple trafficking steps. Other Rabs did not ameliorate alpha-syn toxicity in yeast, but RAB3A, which is highly expressed in neurons and localized to presynaptic termini, and RAB8A, which is localized to post-Golgi vesicles, suppressed toxicity in neuronal models of PD. Thus, alpha-syn causes general defects in vesicle trafficking, to which dopaminergic neurons are especially sensitive.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationships between the Sequence of α-Synuclein and its Membrane Affinity, Fibrillization Propensity, and Yeast ToxicityJournal of Molecular Biology, 2006
- α-Synuclein Overexpression in PC12 and Chromaffin Cells Impairs Catecholamine Release by Interfering with a Late Step in ExocytosisJournal of Neuroscience, 2006
- Mechanisms of Parkinson's Disease Linked to Pathological α-Synuclein: New Targets for Drug DiscoveryNeuron, 2006
- α-synuclein acts in the nucleus to inhibit histone acetylation and promote neurotoxicityHuman Molecular Genetics, 2006
- α-Synuclein Blocks ER-Golgi Traffic and Rab1 Rescues Neuron Loss in Parkinson's ModelsScience, 2006
- Dopamine-dependent neurotoxicity of α-synuclein: A mechanism for selective neurodegeneration in Parkinson diseaseNature Medicine, 2002
- Defective membrane interactions of familial Parkinson’s disease mutant A30P α-synuclein 1 1Edited by I. B. HollandJournal of Molecular Biology, 2002
- Conformational properties of α-synuclein in its free and lipid-associated states 1 1Edited by P. E. WrightJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Transport-vesicle targeting: tethers before SNAREsNature Cell Biology, 1999
- An early cytoplasmic change before Lewy body maturation: an ultrastructural study of the substantia nigra from an autopsy case of juvenile parkinsonismActa Neuropathologica, 1993