α‐Synuclein implicated in Parkinson's disease is present in extracellular biological fluids, including human plasma

Omar M. A. El‐Agnaf(Lancaster University), Sultan A. Salem(Lancaster University), Katerina E. Paleologou(Lancaster University), Leanne J. Cooper(Lancaster University), Nigel J. Fullwood(Lancaster University), Mark J. Gibson(University of Ulster), Martin D. Curran(University of Ulster), J.A. Court(North Tyneside General Hospital), David M. A. Mann(Greater Manchester STEM Centre), Shu‐ichi Ikeda(Shinshu University), Mark Cookson(National Institutes of Health), John Hardy(National Institutes of Health), David Allsop(Lancaster University)
The FASEB Journal
August 15, 2003
Cited by 582

Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) and other related disorders are characterized by the accumulation of fibrillar aggregates of alpha-synuclein protein (alpha-syn) inside brain cells. It is likely that the formation of alpha-syn aggregates plays a seminal role in the pathogenesis of at least some of these diseases, because two different mutations in the gene encoding alpha-syn have been found in inherited forms of PD. alpha-Syn is mainly expressed by neuronal cells and is generally considered to exist as a cytoplasmic protein. Here, we report the unexpected identification of alpha-syn in conditioned culture media from untransfected and alpha-syn-transfected human neuroblastoma cells, as well as in human cerebrospinal fluid and blood plasma. The method used was immunocapture by using anti-alpha-syn antibodies coupled to magnetic beads, followed by detection on Western blots. In all cases, alpha-syn was identified as a single 15 kDa band, which co-migrated with a recombinant form of the protein and reacted with five different antibodies to alpha-syn. Our findings suggest that cells normally secrete alpha-syn into their surrounding media, both in vitro and in vivo. The detection of extracellular alpha-syn and/or its modified forms in body fluids, particularly in human plasma, offers new opportunities for the development of diagnostic tests for PD and related diseases.


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