α-Synuclein Blocks ER-Golgi Traffic and Rab1 Rescues Neuron Loss in Parkinson's Models

Antony A. Cooper(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Aaron D. Gitler(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Anil G. Cashikar(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Cole M. Haynes(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kathryn J. Hill(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Bhupinder Bhullar(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kangning Liu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kexiang Xu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Katherine E. Strathearn(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Fang Liu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Songsong Cao(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kim A. Caldwell(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Guy A. Caldwell(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Gerald Marsischky(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Richard D. Kolodner(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joshua LaBaer(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jean‐Christophe Rochet(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Nancy M. Bonini(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Susan Lindquist(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
June 22, 2006
Cited by 1,368Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Alpha-synuclein (alphaSyn) misfolding is associated with several devastating neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinson's disease (PD). In yeast cells and in neurons alphaSyn accumulation is cytotoxic, but little is known about its normal function or pathobiology. The earliest defect following alphaSyn expression in yeast was a block in endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-Golgi vesicular trafficking. In a genomewide screen, the largest class of toxicity modifiers were proteins functioning at this same step, including the Rab guanosine triphosphatase Ypt1p, which associated with cytoplasmic alphaSyn inclusions. Elevated expression of Rab1, the mammalian YPT1 homolog, protected against alphaSyn-induced dopaminergic neuron loss in animal models of PD. Thus, synucleinopathies may result from disruptions in basic cellular functions that interface with the unique biology of particular neurons to make them especially vulnerable.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis