Direct Membrane Association Drives Mitochondrial Fission by the Parkinson Disease-associated Protein α-Synuclein

Ken Nakamura(Gladstone Institutes), Venu M. Nemani(Johns Hopkins University), Farnaz Azarbal(Johns Hopkins University), Gaia Skibinski(Gladstone Institutes), Jon M. Levy(Johns Hopkins University), Kiyoshi Egami(University of California, San Francisco), Larissa A. Munishkina(University of California, Santa Cruz), Jue Zhang(Johns Hopkins University), Brooke M. Gardner(Johns Hopkins University), Junko Wakabayashi(Johns Hopkins University), Hiromi Sesaki(Johns Hopkins University), Yifan Cheng(University of California, San Francisco), Steven Finkbeiner(Gladstone Institutes), Robert L. Nussbaum(University of California, San Francisco), Eliezer Masliah(University of California San Diego), Robert H. Edwards(University of California, San Francisco)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
April 14, 2011
Cited by 590Open Access
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Abstract

The protein α-synuclein has a central role in Parkinson disease, but the mechanism by which it contributes to neural degeneration remains unknown. We now show that the expression of α-synuclein in mammalian cells, including neurons in vitro and in vivo, causes the fragmentation of mitochondria. The effect is specific for synuclein, with more fragmentation by α- than β- or γ-isoforms, and it is not accompanied by changes in the morphology of other organelles or in mitochondrial membrane potential. However, mitochondrial fragmentation is eventually followed by a decline in respiration and neuronal death. The fragmentation does not require the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 and involves a direct interaction of synuclein with mitochondrial membranes. In vitro, synuclein fragments artificial membranes containing the mitochondrial lipid cardiolipin, and this effect is specific for the small oligomeric forms of synuclein. α-Synuclein thus exerts a primary and direct effect on the morphology of an organelle long implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease.


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