Dopamine oxidation mediates mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction in Parkinson’s disease

Lena F. Burbulla(Northwestern University), Pingping Song(Northwestern University), Joseph R. Mazzulli(Northwestern University), Enrico Zampese(Northwestern University), Yvette C. Wong(Northwestern University), Sohee Jeon(Northwestern University), David P. Santos(Northwestern University), Judith Blanz(Northwestern University), Carolin D. Obermaier(University of Luxembourg), Chelsee Strojny(Northwestern University), Jeffrey N. Savas(Northwestern University), Evangelos Kiskinis(Northwestern University), Xiaoxi Zhuang(University of Chicago), Rejko Krüger(Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg), D. James Surmeier(Northwestern University), Dimitri Krainc(Northwestern University)
Science
September 7, 2017
Cited by 856Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction have been implicated in substantia nigra dopaminergic neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD), but how these pathways are linked in human neurons remains unclear. Here we studied dopaminergic neurons derived from patients with idiopathic and familial PD. We identified a time-dependent pathological cascade beginning with mitochondrial oxidant stress leading to oxidized dopamine accumulation and ultimately resulting in reduced glucocerebrosidase enzymatic activity, lysosomal dysfunction, and α-synuclein accumulation. This toxic cascade was observed in human, but not in mouse, PD neurons at least in part because of species-specific differences in dopamine metabolism. Increasing dopamine synthesis or α-synuclein amounts in mouse midbrain neurons recapitulated pathological phenotypes observed in human neurons. Thus, dopamine oxidation represents an important link between mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction in PD pathogenesis.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis