Molecular and Biological Compatibility with Host Alpha-Synuclein Influences Fibril Pathogenicity

Kelvin C. Luk(Institute on Aging), Dustin J. Covell(Institute on Aging), Victoria Kehm(Institute on Aging), Bin Zhang(Institute on Aging), Insung Y. Song(Institute on Aging), Matthew Byrne(Institute on Aging), Rose M. Pitkin(Institute on Aging), Samantha C. Decker(Institute on Aging), John Q. Trojanowski(Institute on Aging), Virginia M.‐Y. Lee(Institute on Aging)
Cell Reports
September 1, 2016
Cited by 202Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The accumulation and propagation of misfolded α-synuclein (α-Syn) is a central feature of Parkinson's disease and other synucleinopathies. Molecular compatibility between a fibrillar seed and its native protein state is a major determinant of amyloid self-replication. We show that cross-seeded aggregation of human (Hu) and mouse (Ms) α-Syn is bidirectionally restricted. Although fibrils formed by Hu-Ms-α-Syn chimeric mutants can overcome this inhibition in cell-free systems, sequence homology poorly predicts their efficiency in inducing α-Syn pathology in primary neurons or after intracerebral injection into wild-type mice. Chimeric α-Syn fibrils demonstrate enhanced or reduced pathogenicities compared with wild-type Hu- or Ms-α-Syn fibrils. Furthermore, α-Syn mutants induced to polymerize by fibrillar seeds inherit the functional properties of their template, suggesting that transferable pathogenic and non-pathogenic states likely influence the initial engagement between exogenous α-Syn seeds and endogenous neuronal α-Syn. Thus, transmission of synucleinopathies is regulated by biological processes in addition to molecular compatibility.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis