Burré Jacqueline, Sharma Manu, Südhof Thomas C
Departments of Molecular and Cellular Physiology and Appel Institute for Alzheimer's Disease Research, Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York 10021
Departments of Molecular and Cellular Physiology and Appel Institute for Alzheimer's Disease Research, Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York 10021.
J Neurosci. 2015 Apr 1;35(13):5221-32. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4650-14.2015.
α-Synuclein physiologically chaperones SNARE-complex assembly at the synapse but pathologically misfolds into neurotoxic aggregates that are characteristic for neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson's disease, and that may spread from one neuron to the next throughout the brain during Parkinson's disease pathogenesis. In normal nerve terminals, α-synuclein is present in an equilibrium between a cytosolic form that is natively unfolded and monomeric and a membrane-bound form that is composed of an α-helical multimeric species that chaperones SNARE-complex assembly. Although the neurotoxicity of α-synuclein is well established, the relationship between the native conformations of α-synuclein and its pathological aggregation remain incompletely understood; most importantly, it is unclear whether α-synuclein aggregation originates from its monomeric cytosolic or oligomeric membrane-bound form. Here, we address this question by introducing into α-synuclein point mutations that block membrane binding and by then assessing the effect of blocking membrane binding on α-synuclein aggregation and neurotoxicity. We show that membrane binding inhibits α-synuclein aggregation; conversely, blocking membrane binding enhances α-synuclein aggregation. Stereotactic viral expression of wild-type and mutant α-synuclein in the substantia nigra of mice demonstrated that blocking α-synuclein membrane binding significantly enhanced its neurotoxicity in vivo. Our data delineate a folding pathway for α-synuclein that ranges from a physiological multimeric, α-helical, and membrane-bound species that acts as a SNARE-complex chaperone over a monomeric, natively unfolded form to an amyloid-like aggregate that is neurotoxic in vivo.
α-突触核蛋白在生理状态下可促进突触处SNARE复合体的组装,但在病理状态下会错误折叠成神经毒性聚集体,这是帕金森病等神经退行性疾病的特征,并且在帕金森病发病过程中可能会在整个大脑中从一个神经元传播到下一个神经元。在正常神经末梢中,α-突触核蛋白以一种平衡状态存在,即天然未折叠的单体胞质形式和由α-螺旋多聚体组成的膜结合形式,后者作为SNARE复合体组装的分子伴侣。尽管α-突触核蛋白的神经毒性已得到充分证实,但其天然构象与其病理聚集之间的关系仍未完全理解;最重要的是,尚不清楚α-突触核蛋白的聚集是源于其单体胞质形式还是寡聚膜结合形式。在此,我们通过在α-突触核蛋白中引入阻止膜结合的点突变,然后评估阻止膜结合对α-突触核蛋白聚集和神经毒性的影响来解决这个问题。我们发现膜结合抑制α-突触核蛋白的聚集;相反,阻止膜结合会增强α-突触核蛋白的聚集。在小鼠黑质中立体定向病毒表达野生型和突变型α-突触核蛋白表明,阻止α-突触核蛋白的膜结合会显著增强其在体内的神经毒性。我们的数据描绘了α-突触核蛋白的折叠途径,从作为SNARE复合体分子伴侣的生理多聚体、α-螺旋和膜结合形式,到单体、天然未折叠形式,再到在体内具有神经毒性的淀粉样聚集体。