alpha-synuclein and fluorexon

alpha-synuclein has been researched along with fluorexon* in 6 studies

Other Studies

6 other study(ies) available for alpha-synuclein and fluorexon

ArticleYear
Single-vesicle imaging reveals lipid-selective and stepwise membrane disruption by monomeric α-synuclein.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2020, 06-23, Volume: 117, Issue:25

    The interaction of the neuronal protein α-synuclein with lipid membranes appears crucial in the context of Parkinson's disease, but the underlying mechanistic details, including the roles of different lipids in pathogenic protein aggregation and membrane disruption, remain elusive. Here, we used single-vesicle resolution fluorescence and label-free scattering microscopy to investigate the interaction kinetics of monomeric α-synuclein with surface-tethered vesicles composed of different negatively charged lipids. Supported by a theoretical model to account for structural changes in scattering properties of surface-tethered lipid vesicles, the data demonstrate stepwise vesicle disruption and asymmetric membrane deformation upon α-synuclein binding to phosphatidylglycerol vesicles at protein concentrations down to 10 nM (∼100 proteins per vesicle). In contrast, phosphatidylserine vesicles were only marginally affected. These insights into structural consequences of α-synuclein interaction with lipid vesicles highlight the contrasting roles of different anionic lipids, which may be of mechanistic relevance for both normal protein function (e.g., synaptic vesicle binding) and dysfunction (e.g., mitochondrial membrane interaction).

    Topics: alpha-Synuclein; Fluoresceins; Humans; Kinetics; Lipid Bilayers; Membrane Lipids; Membranes; Nerve Tissue Proteins; Neurons; Parkinson Disease; Phosphatidylglycerols; Protein Binding

2020
H63D variant of the homeostatic iron regulator (HFE) gene alters α-synuclein expression, aggregation, and toxicity.
    Journal of neurochemistry, 2020, Volume: 155, Issue:2

    Pathological features of Parkinson's disease include the formation of Lewy bodies containing α-synuclein and the accumulation of iron in the substantia nigra. Previous studies have suggested that iron accumulation contributes to the Parkinson's disease pathology through reactive oxygen species production and accelerated α-synuclein aggregation. This study examines the effects of commonly occurring H63D variant of the homeostatic iron regulatory (HFE) gene on α-synuclein pathology in cell culture and animal models. H63D HFE expression in SH-SY5Y cells lowered endogenous α-synuclein levels and significantly decreased pre-formed fibril-induced α-synuclein aggregation. H63D HFE cells were also protected from pre-formed fibril-induced apoptosis. Autophagic flux, a major pathway for α-synuclein clearance, was increased in H63D HFE cells. Expression of REDD1 was elevated and rapamycin treatment was unable to further induce autophagy, indicating mTORC1 inhibition as the main mechanism of autophagy induction. Moreover, siRNA knockdown of REDD1 in H63D HFE cells decreased autophagic flux and increased the sensitivity to PFF-mediated toxicity. While iron chelator (deferiprone) treatment rescued WT HFE cells from pre-formed fibril toxicity, it exacerbated or was unable to rescue H63D HFE cells. In the in vivo pre-formed fibril intracranial injection model, H67D Hfe (mouse homolog of the human H63D HFE variant) C57BL/6J × 129 mice showed less α-synuclein aggregation and less decline in motor function compared to WT Hfe. Collectively, this study suggests that H63D HFE variant modifies α-synuclein pathology through the induction of autophagy and has the potential to impact the pathogenesis and treatment response in Parkinson's disease.

    Topics: alpha-Synuclein; Animals; Autophagy; Cells, Cultured; Deferiprone; Fluoresceins; Gene Knockdown Techniques; Hemochromatosis Protein; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Iron Chelating Agents; Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mutation; Psychomotor Performance; Transcription Factors

2020
Two conformationally distinct α-synuclein oligomers share common epitopes and the ability to impair long-term potentiation.
    PloS one, 2019, Volume: 14, Issue:3

    Parkinson's Disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease for which there currently is no cure. Aggregation of the pre-synaptic protein α-synuclein (aSN) into oligomers (αSOs) is believed to play a key role in PD pathology, but little is known about αSO formation in vivo and how they induce neurodegeneration. Both the naturally occurring polyunsaturated fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE), strongly upregulated during ROS conditions, stimulate the formation of αSOs, highlighting a potential role in PD. Yet, insight into αSOs structure and biological effects is still limited as most oligomer preparations studied to date are heterogeneous in composition. Here we have aggregated aSN in the presence of HNE and DHA and purified the αSOs using size exclusion chromatography. Both compounds stimulate formation of spherical αSOs containing anti-parallel β-sheet structure which have the same shape as unmodified αSOs though ca. 2-fold larger. Furthermore, the yield and stabilities of these oligomers are significantly higher than for unmodified aSN. Both modified and unmodified αSOs permeabilize synthetic vesicles, show high co-localisation with glutamatergic synapses and decrease Long Term Potentiation (LTP), in line with the reported synaptotoxic effects of αSOs. We conclude that DHA- and HNE-αSOs are convenient models for pathogenic disease-associated αSOs in PD.

    Topics: Aldehydes; alpha-Synuclein; Animals; Circular Dichroism; Docosahexaenoic Acids; Epitopes; Fatty Acids, Unsaturated; Fluoresceins; Glutamine; Hippocampus; Humans; Light; Lipid Peroxidation; Long-Term Potentiation; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Microscopy, Atomic Force; Neurons; Parkinson Disease; Protein Binding; Protein Structure, Secondary; Rats; Scattering, Radiation; Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared; Synapses

2019
Endocytic vesicle rupture is a conserved mechanism of cellular invasion by amyloid proteins.
    Acta neuropathologica, 2017, Volume: 134, Issue:4

    Numerous pathological amyloid proteins spread from cell to cell during neurodegenerative disease, facilitating the propagation of cellular pathology and disease progression. Understanding the mechanism by which disease-associated amyloid protein assemblies enter target cells and induce cellular dysfunction is, therefore, key to understanding the progressive nature of such neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we utilized an imaging-based assay to monitor the ability of disease-associated amyloid assemblies to rupture intracellular vesicles following endocytosis. We observe that the ability to induce vesicle rupture is a common feature of α-synuclein (α-syn) assemblies, as assemblies derived from WT or familial disease-associated mutant α-syn all exhibited the ability to induce vesicle rupture. Similarly, different conformational strains of WT α-syn assemblies, but not monomeric or oligomeric forms, efficiently induced vesicle rupture following endocytosis. The ability to induce vesicle rupture was not specific to α-syn, as amyloid assemblies of tau and huntingtin Exon1 with pathologic polyglutamine repeats also exhibited the ability to induce vesicle rupture. We also observe that vesicles ruptured by α-syn are positive for the autophagic marker LC3 and can accumulate and fuse into large, intracellular structures resembling Lewy bodies in vitro. Finally, we show that the same markers of vesicle rupture surround Lewy bodies in brain sections from PD patients. These data underscore the importance of this conserved endocytic vesicle rupture event as a damaging mechanism of cellular invasion by amyloid assemblies of multiple neurodegenerative disease-associated proteins, and suggest that proteinaceous inclusions such as Lewy bodies form as a consequence of continued fusion of autophagic vesicles in cells unable to degrade ruptured vesicles and their amyloid contents.

    Topics: alpha-Synuclein; Amyloidogenic Proteins; Animals; Autophagy; Biological Transport; Brain; Cells, Cultured; Female; Fluoresceins; Humans; Lewy Bodies; Male; Neurons; Parkinson Disease; Phosphatidylglycerols; Rats; Transport Vesicles; Unilamellar Liposomes

2017
Oligomers of Parkinson's Disease-Related α-Synuclein Mutants Have Similar Structures but Distinctive Membrane Permeabilization Properties.
    Biochemistry, 2015, May-26, Volume: 54, Issue:20

    Single-amino acid mutations in the human α-synuclein (αS) protein are related to early onset Parkinson's disease (PD). In addition to the well-known A30P, A53T, and E46K mutants, recently a number of new familial disease-related αS mutations have been discovered. How these mutations affect the putative physiological function of αS and the disease pathology is still unknown. Here we focus on the H50Q and G51D familial mutants and show that like wild-type αS, H50Q and G51D monomers bind to negatively charged membranes, form soluble partially folded oligomers with an aggregation number of ~30 monomers under specific conditions, and can aggregate into amyloid fibrils. We systematically studied the ability of these isolated oligomers to permeabilize membranes composed of anionic phospholipids (DOPG) and membranes mimicking the mitochondrial phospholipid composition (CL:POPE:POPC) using a calcein release assay. Small-angle X-ray scattering studies of isolated oligomers show that oligomers formed from wild-type αS and the A30P, E46K, H50Q, G51D, and A53T disease-related mutants are composed of a similar number of monomers. However, although the binding affinity of the monomeric protein and the aggregation number of the oligomers formed under our specific protocol are comparable for wild-type αS and H50Q and G51D αS, G51D oligomers cannot disrupt negatively charged and physiologically relevant model membranes. Replacement of the membrane-immersed glycine with a negatively charged aspartic acid at position 51 apparently abrogates membrane destabilization, whereas a mutation in the proximal but solvent-exposed part of the membrane-bound α-helix such as that found in the H50Q mutant has little effect on the bilayer disrupting properties of oligomers.

    Topics: alpha-Synuclein; Cell Membrane Permeability; Fluoresceins; Humans; Membranes, Artificial; Multiprotein Complexes; Mutation, Missense; Parkinson Disease; Phosphatidylcholines; Phosphatidylethanolamines; Phosphatidylglycerols; Protein Binding; Scattering, Small Angle; X-Ray Diffraction

2015
The interplay between lipids and dopamine on α-synuclein oligomerization and membrane binding.
    Bioscience reports, 2013, Oct-22, Volume: 33, Issue:5

    The deposition of α-syn (α-synuclein) as amyloid fibrils and the selective loss of DA (dopamine) containing neurons in the substantia nigra are two key features of PD (Parkinson's disease). α-syn is a natively unfolded protein and adopts an α-helical conformation upon binding to lipid membrane. Oligomeric species of α-syn have been proposed to be the pathogenic species associated with PD because they can bind lipid membranes and disrupt membrane integrity. DA is readily oxidized to generate reactive intermediates and ROS (reactive oxygen species) and in the presence of DA, α-syn form of SDS-resistant soluble oligomers. It is postulated that the formation of the α-syn:DA oligomers involves the cross-linking of DA-melanin with α-syn, via covalent linkage, hydrogen and hydrophobic interactions. We investigate the effect of lipids on DA-induced α-syn oligomerization and studied the ability of α-syn:DA oligomers to interact with lipids vesicles. Our results show that the interaction of α-syn with lipids inhibits the formation of DA-induced α-syn oligomers. Moreover, the α-syn:DA oligomer cannot interact with lipid vesicles or cause membrane permeability. Thus, the formation of α-syn:DA oligomers may alter the actions of α-syn which require membrane association, leading to disruption of its normal cellular function.

    Topics: alpha-Synuclein; Cell Membrane; Cell Membrane Permeability; Dopamine; Fluoresceins; Fluorescent Dyes; Humans; Liposomes; Phospholipids; Protein Binding; Protein Multimerization; Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate; Surface-Active Agents

2013