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Age-associated insolubility of parkin in human midbrain is linked to redox balance and sequestration of reactive dopamine metabolites

Authors :
Qiubo Jiang
Brian O'Nuallain
Clemens R. Scherzer
Eve C. Tsai
Jennifer A. Chan
Peggy Taylor
John Woulfe
An Tran
Ming Jin
Steve M. Callaghan
Gary S. Shaw
Masashi Takanashi
Bojan Shutinoski
Mei Zhang
Jacqueline M. Tokarew
Jasmine M. Khan
Nobutaka Hattori
Daniel N. El-Kodsi
Luigi Zecca
Alexandre Prat
Andrew B. West
Andy C. H. Ng
Xiajun Dong
Juan Li
Travis K. Fehr
Liqun Wang
Nathalie A. Lengacher
Angela P. Nguyen
David S. Park
Doo Soon Im
Julianna J. Tomlinson
Gergely Tóth
Michael G. Schlossmacher
Kathryn R. Barber
Lawrence G. Puente
Arne Holmgren
Stephanie Zandee
Rajib Sengupta
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2021.

Abstract

The mechanisms by which parkin protects the adult human brain from Parkinson disease remain incompletely understood. We hypothesized that parkin cysteines participate in redox reactions and that these are reflected in its posttranslational modifications. We found that in post mortem human brain, including in the Substantia nigra, parkin is largely insoluble after age 40 years; this transition is linked to its oxidation, such as at residues Cys95 and Cys253. In mice, oxidative stress induces posttranslational modifications of parkin cysteines that lower its solubility in vivo. Similarly, oxidation of recombinant parkin by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) promotes its insolubility and aggregate formation, and in exchange leads to the reduction of H2O2. This thiol-based redox activity is diminished by parkin point mutants, e.g., p.C431F and p.G328E. In prkn-null mice, H2O2 levels are increased under oxidative stress conditions, such as acutely by 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine toxin exposure or chronically due to a second, genetic hit; H2O2 levels are also significantly increased in parkin-deficient human brain. In dopamine toxicity studies, wild-type parkin, but not disease-linked mutants, protects human dopaminergic cells, in part through lowering H2O2. Parkin also neutralizes reactive, electrophilic dopamine metabolites via adduct formation, which occurs foremost at the primate-specific residue Cys95. Further, wild-type but not p.C95A-mutant parkin augments melanin formation in vitro. By probing sections of adult, human midbrain from control individuals with epitope-mapped, monoclonal antibodies, we found specific and robust parkin reactivity that co-localizes with neuromelanin pigment, frequently within LAMP-3/CD63+ lysosomes. We conclude that oxidative modifications of parkin cysteines are associated with protective outcomes, which include the reduction of H2O2, conjugation of reactive dopamine metabolites, sequestration of radicals within insoluble aggregates, and increased melanin formation. The loss of these complementary redox effects may augment oxidative stress during ageing in dopamine-producing cells of mutant PRKN allele carriers, thereby enhancing the risk of Parkinson’s-linked neurodegeneration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14320533 and 00016322
Volume :
141
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe8c45df270412089e53128defbb6048