Traffic
report
Clearing protein jams in neurons can reverse
Parkinson’s symptoms in animals
Few things put us in a worse mood than sitting in traffic.
But when a similar kind of traffic jam occurs in our
neurons, the consequences are far more dire. Parkinson’s
disease can set in, and when it does, there’s
no turning back.
In general, statistics for neurological disorders are
grim. More than a million Americans suffer from Parkinson’s
disease alone—a number that is expected to soar
over the next few decades as the population ages. No
current therapies alter the fundamental clinical course
of the condition.
A recent advance in our understanding of this condition,
however, makes researchers a bit more optimistic about
our prospects for eventually treating patients more
effectively.
| “This protein is the traffic cop for the
ER-Golgi route,” says Whitehead Member Susan
Lindquist. “Once it’s gone, the molecules
start backing up at the ER.” |
Scientists at Whitehead Institute, in collaboration
with colleagues at several research centers, including
the University of Missouri’s School of Biological
Sciences, have identified a key biological thoroughfare
that, when backed up, causes Parkinson’s symptoms.
Even more importantly, they have figured out how to
repair the traffic flow and restore normal neurological
function in certain animal models.
“For the first time we’ve been able to
repair dopaminergic neurons, the specific cells that
are damaged in Parkinson’s disease,” says
Whitehead Member and Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Investigator Susan
Lindquist, senior author in the paper appearing
last June in Science.
This research began back in 2003, when Tiago Outeiro,
a graduate student in Lindquist’s lab, described
using yeast cells as “living test tubes”
in which to study Parkinson’s. A Science
paper reported that when a Parkinson’s-related
protein called alpha-synuclein was over-expressed in
these cells, clumps of misshapen proteins gathered near
the membrane, and in many cases the cells either became
sick or died.
This paper was of particular interest because the findings
were arrived at via yeast cells, a rather unlikely model
organism for brain disease.
Aaron Gitler and Anil Cashikar, postdoctoral researchers
in the Lindquist lab, decided to follow up by asking
a simple question: Is it possible to rescue these cells
when an overexpression of alpha-synuclein would normally
make them sick?
They began with an array of yeast cells in which each
cell over-expressed one particular gene. This array,
prepared by scientists at the Harvard Institute of Proteomics,
covers the entire yeast genome. All cells were also
infected with alpha-synuclein. They reasoned that if
they identified genes whose over-expression rescued
a cell, that would tell them something about how alpha-synuclein
made the cell sick in the first place.
Most of the proteins that they identified pointed to
a pathway that involves two cellular organelles, the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi complex. The
ER is the cell’s protein factory, where proteins
assume their requisite shapes. Once a protein has properly
folded, it is trafficked over to the Golgi, where it
is fine-tuned and further prepared for its designated
task.
Working with Antony Cooper from the University of Missouri,
Kansas City, Lindquist’s team demonstrated that
when alpha-synuclein becomes mutated and clumps at the
cell surface, it drags away a protein that eases transport
between the ER and the Golgi.
“This protein is the traffic cop for the ER-Golgi
route,” says Lindquist. “Once it’s
gone, the molecules start backing up at the ER.”
It is this cellular traffic jam that causes cell death.
This isn’t just a general toxic effect caused
by any misfolded protein. It is specific to alpha-synuclein,
the protein associated with Parkinson’s disease.
Repairing neurons
“All this was done in yeast,” says Gitler.
“Our next goal was to find what this told us about
actual neurons.”
If mutations of alpha-synuclein dragged the ER-Golgi
protein away from doing its job of directing traffic,
as the yeast research indicated, then cell death might
be averted simply by increasing the levels of this transport
protein—that is, by adding extra traffic cops
to the scene.
Working with colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania,
the University of Alabama, and Purdue University, the
consortium tested this hypothesis in the fruit fly,
C. elegans worm and in neurons culled from
rats—all of which had alpha-synuclein-induced
Parkinson’s symptoms. In every case, symptoms
were reversed by increasing levels of the trafficking
protein.
“We tried this a number of different ways, from
creating transgenic animals that naturally over-expressed
this protein, to injecting a copy of the gene for this
transport protein into the neurons through a gene-therapy
technique,” says Gitler. “The results were
the same. Cell death ceased, and the neurons were restored
to normal health.”
“Protein folding problems are universal, so we
hoped we could use these simple model organisms to study
something as deeply complex as neurodegenerative disease,”
says Lindquist, who is also a professor of biology at
MIT. “Most people thought we were crazy. But we
now not only have made progress in understanding this
dreadful disease, but we have a new platform for screening
pharmaceuticals.”
“This gives a whole new direction for understanding
what’s been going wrong in these patients, and
for considering much better strategies for treating
people,” says Cooper.
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