Disease-causing protein protects against nerve damage in Parkinson's diseaseNovember 04, 2005Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have discovered that a protein associated with causing neurodegenerative conditions may, when appearing in normal amounts, actually protect against neurodegeneration. The findings, appearing in today's issue of the journal Cell, have surprised the researchers, because an excess of the same specific protein-alpha-synuclein-causes Parkinson's disease. "It's the first time that anyone has shown that synuclein has any positive function at all in the body, and this is important because it's been known to be involved in neurodegeneration," said Dr. Thomas Südhof, senior author of the study and director of the Center for Basic Neuroscience. Dr. Südhof also is an investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The key to their findings was determining the interaction between alpha-synuclein and another protein-cysteine-string-protein-alpha, or CSP-alpha. The researchers' investigation involved several strains of mutant mice, which produced differing amounts of CSP-alpha or alpha-synuclein. CSP-alpha is a "co-chaperone," meaning that it helps other proteins fold into their normal shapes, a vital process in the instantaneous reactions that occur at terminals of a nerve cell. When mutant mice lack only CSP-alpha, they appear normal for their first three weeks, then undergo rapid nerve degeneration and die at one to four months of age. When mutant mice lack only alpha-synuclein, on the other hand, they continue to appear normal as they age, indicating that alpha-synuclein might not be essential in healthy nerve cells. But mice that have been bred to produce an excess of human alpha-synuclein undergo a slowly progressing nerve degeneration resembling Parkinson's. The researchers bred mice lacking CSP with mice with excessive human synuclein in their brains, expecting to see a faster descent into the Parkinson's-like symptoms in the offspring. Instead, they produced apparently healthy animals. In their terms, the alpha-synuclein "rescued" the mice from the harmful effects of lacking CSP-alpha. The results were "exactly the opposite of what I expected," said Dr. Sreeganga Chandra, instructor in the Center for Basic Neuroscience and lead author of the study. "The rescued animals can live for one year or longer." The researchers also bred mice that produced neither CSP-alpha nor alpha-synuclein and found they suffered neurodegeneration faster than mice just lacking CSP-alpha-another sign that alpha-synuclein protects against a lack of CSP-alpha. In humans, clumps of alpha-synuclein, called Lewy bodies, are found in the brain cells of patients with Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and other degenerative diseases. The researchers speculate that the formation of Lewy bodies may take alpha-synuclein out of circulation in cells, thus removing its protective action. Testing this hypothesis would involve looking for mutations in the genes for CSP-alpha or alpha-synuclein in patients with neurodegenerative diseases. "Trying to understand what's going on in a dying brain is very difficult," said Dr. Südhof, who directs the Gill Center for Research on Brain Cell Communication and the C. Vincent Prothro Center for Research in Basic Neuroscience. The researchers also found that alpha-synuclein doesn't bind to or react with the same proteins that CSP-alpha does, so it doesn't simply act as a substitute. However, both molecules bind to the membranes of synaptic vesicles-small spheres that contain the nerve cell's neurotransmitters, chemicals that carry signals between brain cells-indicating that they both act at the vesicles' surface. "There's a pathway, but we don't really know all the players in this pathway," Dr. Chandra said. Other researchers involved in the work were Gilbert Gallardo, student research assistant at the Center for Basic Neuroscience, and researchers from Germany and Spain. The work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health, the American Parkinson Disease Association and the Spanish Ministry of Education. The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Cente |
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| Related Parkinsons Disease Current Events and Parkinsons Disease News Articles Rutgers Research: Direct Evidence of the Role of Sleep in Memory Formation is Uncovered A Rutgers University, Newark and Collége de France, Paris research team has pinpointed for the first time the mechanism that takes place during sleep that causes learning and memory formation to occur. Higher occurrence of Parkinson's linked to low LDL cholesterol People with low levels of LDL cholesterol are more likely to have Parkinson's disease than people with high LDL levels, according to University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers. Synchronous neuronal firing may underlie Parkinson's disease In a finding that contradicts current theories behind Parkinson's disease, neuroscientists at Duke University Medical Center have discovered in mice that critical nerve cells fire all at the same time and thus overwhelm the brain's ability to control the body's movements. Dopamine imbalances cause sleep disorders in animal models of Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia Neuroscientists at Duke University Medical Center working with genetically engineered mice have found that the brain chemical dopamine plays a critical role in regulating sleep and brain activity associated with dreaming. Researchers announce results of study on genetic variation in Parkinson's disease Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have completed one of the first large-scale studies of the role of common genetic variation in Parkinson's disease (PD). Laser probe of a brain pigment's anatomy may offer insight into Parkinson's disease In a finding that may offer clues about Parkinson's disease, a team led by Duke University researchers used a sophisticated laser system to gain evidence that a dark brown pigment that accumulates in people's brains consists of layers of two other pigments commonly found in hair. Two copies of G2019S Parkinson's gene mutation doesn't lead to more severe disease A group of Parkinson's disease researchers concluded there are no observable differences between those who have two copies of the most common mutation of the recently discovered LRRK2 gene and those who have only one copy. Government cash injection for University spin-out company's stem cell research A spin-out company from the University of Nottingham has been awarded around £250,000 of Government funding to develop innovative stem cell therapies that could one day provide new treatments for patients suffering from illnesses including Parkinson's disease and stroke. Two minutes of magnetic stimulation can change your brain for an hour A couple of minutes is all it takes to 'knock out' bits of your brain for an hour, according to a new study by a University College London (UCL) team. The team have been working on ways to improve a method known as transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and are now using their adapted version of TMS to investigate possible treatments for stroke patients or those with Parkinson's disease. Gene therapy shows promise in model of Parkinson's disease Scientists at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Lausanne, Switzerland, have conducted novel experiments that might one day lead to gene therapy treatment options for patients with Parkinson's disease. In research published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the research team, led by EPFL President Patrick Aebischer, found that viral delivery of a gene associated with Parkinson's disease protected neurons from degeneration. Parkinson's disease is a progressive, degenerative neurological disorder in which dopamine-producing neurons in the part of the brain responsible for coordinating muscle movement die or become so damaged that they are no More Parkinsons Disease Current Events and Parkinsons Disease News Articles |
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