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Parkin interacting substrate zinc finger protein 746 is a pathological mediator in Parkinson’s disease

Authors :
Rosa Shi
Sangjune Kim
Manoj Kumar
Preston Ge
Xiaobo Mao
Dong-Hoon Kim
Lino Tessarollo
Seung Pil Yun
Han Seok Ko
Saurav Brahmachari
Saebom Lee
Changqing Yuan
Tae In Kam
Esther J. Kim
Yunjong Lee
Haisong Jiang
Deborah A. Swing
Ted M. Dawson
Alex Liu
Stephan Quintin
Senthilkumar S. Karuppagounder
Valina L. Dawson
Source :
Brain
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

α-Synuclein misfolding and aggregation plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease. Although loss of function mutations in the ubiquitin ligase, parkin, cause autosomal recessive Parkinson’s disease, there is evidence that parkin is inactivated in sporadic Parkinson’s disease. Whether parkin inactivation is a driver of neurodegeneration in sporadic Parkinson’s disease or a mere spectator is unknown. Here we show that parkin in inactivated through c-Abelson kinase phosphorylation of parkin in three α-synuclein-induced models of neurodegeneration. This results in the accumulation of parkin interacting substrate protein (zinc finger protein 746) and aminoacyl tRNA synthetase complex interacting multifunctional protein 2 with increased parkin interacting substrate protein levels playing a critical role in α-synuclein-induced neurodegeneration, since knockout of parkin interacting substrate protein attenuates the degenerative process. Thus, accumulation of parkin interacting substrate protein links parkin inactivation and α-synuclein in a common pathogenic neurodegenerative pathway relevant to both sporadic and familial forms Parkinson’s disease. Thus, suppression of parkin interacting substrate protein could be a potential therapeutic strategy to halt the progression of Parkinson’s disease and related α-synucleinopathies.

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Volume :
142
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d5c71b194f292ba437e339a97f15aaa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awz172