Lipopolysaccharide from Gut Microbiota Modulates α-Synuclein Aggregation and Alters Its Biological Function

Dipita Bhattacharyya(Bose Institute), Ganesh M. Mohite(Indian Institute of Technology Bombay), Janarthanan Krishnamoorthy(Jimma University), Nilanjan Gayen(Bose Institute), Surabhi Mehra(Indian Institute of Technology Bombay), Ambuja Navalkar(Indian Institute of Technology Bombay), Samuel A. Kotler(National Institutes of Health), Bhisma N. Ratha(Bose Institute), Anirban Ghosh(Bose Institute), Rakesh Kumar(Indian Institute of Technology Bombay), Kanchan Garai(TIFR Centre for Interdisciplinary Sciences), A. Mandal(Bose Institute), Samir K. Maji(Indian Institute of Technology Bombay), Anirban Bhunia(Bose Institute)
ACS Chemical Neuroscience
March 11, 2019
Cited by 104

Abstract

Altered intestinal permeability has been correlated with Parkinson's pathophysiology in the enteric nervous system, before manifestations in the central nervous system (CNS). The inflammatory endotoxin or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) released by gut bacteria is known to modulate α-synuclein amyloidogenesis through the formation of intermediate nucleating species. Here, biophysical techniques in conjunction with microscopic images revealed the molecular interaction between lipopolysaccharide and α-synuclein that induce rapid nucleation events. This heteromolecular interaction stabilizes the α-helical intermediates in the α-synuclein aggregation pathway. Multitude NMR studies probed the residues involved in the LPS-binding structural motif that modulates the nucleating forms, affecting the cellular internalization and associated cytotoxicity. Collectively, our data characterizes this heteromolecular interaction associated with an alternative pathway in Parkinson's disease progression.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis