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Review Cell death pathways in Parkinson's disease: proximal triggers, distal effectors, and final steps. 2009
Levy OA, Malagelada C, Greene LA. · Department of Neurology, Columbia University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA. · Apoptosis. · Pubmed #19165601 No free full text.
Abstract: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disorder. Neuronal cell death in PD is still poorly understood, despite a wealth of potential pathogenic mechanisms and pathways. Defects in several cellular systems have been implicated as early triggers that start cells down the road toward neuronal death. These include abnormal protein accumulation, particularly of alpha-synuclein; altered protein degradation via multiple pathways; mitochondrial dysfunction; oxidative stress; neuroinflammation; and dysregulated kinase signaling. As dysfunction in these systems mounts, pathways that are more explicitly involved in cell death become recruited. These include JNK signaling, p53 activation, cell cycle re-activation, and signaling through bcl-2 family proteins. Eventually, neurons become overwhelmed and degenerate; however, even the mechanism of final cell death in PD is still unsettled. In this review, we will discuss cell death triggers and effectors that are relevant to PD, highlighting important unresolved issues and implications for the development of neuroprotective therapies.
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Article RTP801 is induced in Parkinson's disease and mediates neuron death by inhibiting Akt phosphorylation/activation. free! 2008
Malagelada C, Jin ZH, Greene LA. · Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA. · J Neurosci. · Pubmed #19118169 links to free full text
Abstract: Previously, we reported that RTP801, a stress regulated protein, is induced in multiple cellular models of Parkinson's disease (PD), in an animal model of PD and in dopaminergic neurons of PD patients. In cellular PD models, RTP801 is both sufficient and necessary for death. We further showed that RTP801 and PD mimetics such as 6-OHDA trigger neuron death by suppressing activation of the key kinase mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Here, we report that as a consequence of mTOR signaling blockade, 6-OHDA suppresses the phosphorylation and activation of Akt, a major supporter of neuron survival. This effect is mediated by RTP801 and appears to underlie neuron death induced by 6-OHDA. Examination of postmortem dopaminergic neurons reveals a consistent depletion of phospho-Akt, but not of total Akt in PD patients. These observations support a sequential mechanism in which PD-associated stresses induce RTP801, suppress mTOR signaling, deplete phosphorylated/activated Akt and permit neuron degeneration and death.
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Article Proapoptotic Nix activates the JNK pathway by interacting with POSH and mediates death in a Parkinson disease model. free! 2007
Wilhelm M, Xu Z, Kukekov NV, Gire S, Greene LA. · Department of Pediatrics, Columbia University Health Sciences, New York, New York 10032, USA. · J Biol Chem. · Pubmed #17095503 links to free full text
Abstract: Nix, a pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein, promotes apoptosis of non-neuronal cells, although the mechanisms involved remain incompletely understood. Using a yeast two-hybrid screen with POSH (plenty of SH3 domains, a scaffold involved in activation of the apoptotic JNK/c-Jun pathway) as the bait, we identified an interaction between POSH and Nix. Co-immunoprecipitation and in vitro binding studies confirmed a direct interaction between POSH and Nix in mammalian cells. When overexpressed in HEK293 cells, Nix promotes apoptosis along with enhanced phosphorylation/activation of JNKs and their target c-Jun. These effects appear to be dependent on POSH because Nix does not promote either JNK/c-Jun phosphorylation or apoptosis of 293 cells that do not express POSH. Nix and POSH appear to mutually stabilize one another and this effect could contribute to their promotion of death. Past work showed induction of Nix transcripts in a cellular model of Parkinson disease based on neuronal PC12 cells exposed to 6-hydroxydopamine. Here, we confirm elevation of Nix protein in this model and that Nix over-expression causes apoptotic death of PC12 cells by a mechanism dependent on c-Jun activation. Expression of s-Nix, a dominant-negative form of Nix, protects neuronal PC12 cells from 6-hydroxydopamine but not from nerve growth factor deprivation. These results indicate that Nix promotes cell death via interaction with POSH and activation of the JNK/c-Jun pathway and that Nix protein is induced and contributes to cell death in a cellular model of Parkinson disease.
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Article RTP801 is elevated in Parkinson brain substantia nigral neurons and mediates death in cellular models of Parkinson's disease by a mechanism involving mammalian target of rapamycin inactivation. free! 2006
Malagelada C, Ryu EJ, Biswas SC, Jackson-Lewis V, Greene LA. · Department of Pathology and Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA. · J Neurosci. · Pubmed #17005863 links to free full text
Abstract: The molecules underlying neuron loss in Parkinson's disease (PD) are essentially unknown, and current therapies focus on diminishing symptoms rather than preventing neuron death. We identified RTP801 as a gene whose transcripts were highly induced in a cellular model of PD in which death of neuronal catecholaminergic PC12 cells was triggered by the PD mimetic 6-OHDA. Here, we find that RTP801 protein is also induced in this and additional cellular and animal PD models. To assess the relevance of these observations to PD, we used immunohistochemistry to compare RTP801 expression in postmortem brains from PD and control patients. For all PD brains examined, expression was highly elevated within neuromelanin-containing neurons of the substantia nigra but not in cerebellar neurons. Evaluation of the potential role of RTP801 induction in our cellular model revealed that RTP801 overexpression is sufficient to promote death but does not further elevate death caused by 6-OHDA. Furthermore, RTP801 induction is requisite for death in our cellular PD models and in 6-OHDA-treated cultured sympathetic neurons in that its knockdown by short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) is protective. The mechanism by which 6-OHDA and RTP801 induce neuron death appears to involve repression of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase activity, and such death is inhibited by shRNAs targeting TSC2 (tuberous sclerosis complex), a protein with which RTP801 interacts to block mTOR activation. Our findings thus suggest that the elevation of RTP801 we detect in PD substantia nigral neurons may mediate their degeneration and death and that RTP801 and its signaling cascade may be novel potential therapeutic targets for the disease.
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Article Puma and p53 play required roles in death evoked in a cellular model of Parkinson disease. 2005
Biswas SC, Ryu E, Park C, Malagelada C, Greene LA. · Department of Pathology, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior and Taub Center for Alzheimer's Disease Research, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, USA. · Neurochem Res. · Pubmed #16187218 No free full text.
Abstract: 6-Hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) is widely used in vivo and in vitro to mimic the selective neuronal degeneration that characterizes Parkinson disease (PD). To uncover candidate genes that may mediate neuron death in PD, we previously used SAGE to identify transcripts that are rapidly induced by 6-OHDA in neuronally differentiated PC12 cells. Among induced pro-apoptotic genes was that encoding the BH3-only protein PUMA. Here, we confirm that 6-OHDA induces both PUMA mRNA and protein. 6-OHDA additionally induced Bim, another pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein. Using specific siRNAs, we demonstrate that PUMA, but not Bim, is required for death evoked by 6-OHDA. PUMA is a target of p53, a transcription factor activated by 6-OHDA. Involvement of p53 in 6-OHDA evoked death was confirmed by the protective actions of a DN p53 and pifithrin alpha, inhibitors of p53 signaling. Our findings thus indicate that p53 and PUMA play required roles in a cellular model of PD.
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Article Analysis of gene expression changes in a cellular model of Parkinson disease. 2005
Ryu EJ, Angelastro JM, Greene LA. · Institute of Human Nutrition, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, USA. · Neurobiol Dis. · Pubmed #15649696 No free full text.
Abstract: We employed Serial Analysis of Gene Expression to identify transcriptional changes in a cellular model of Parkinson Disease (PD). The model consisted of neuronally differentiated PC12 cells compared before and after 8 hours' exposure to 6-hydroxydopamine. Approximately 1200 transcripts were significantly induced by 6-OHDA and approximately 500 of these are currently matched to known genes. Here, we categorize the regulated genes according to known functional activities and discuss their potential roles in neuron death and survival and in PD. We find induction of multiple death-associated genes as well as many with the capacity for neuroprotection. This suggests that survival or death of individual neurons in PD may reflect an integrated response to both protective and destructive gene changes. Our findings identify a number of regulated genes as candidates for involvement in PD and therefore as potential targets for therapeutic intervention. Such intervention may include both inhibiting the induction/activity of death-promoting genes and enhancing those with neuroprotective activity.
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Article Endoplasmic reticulum stress and the unfolded protein response in cellular models of Parkinson's disease. free! 2002
Ryu EJ, Harding HP, Angelastro JM, Vitolo OV, Ron D, Greene LA. · Department of Pathology, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York 10032, USA. · J Neurosci. · Pubmed #12486162 links to free full text
Abstract: 6-hydroxydopamine, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-pyridinium (MPP+), and rotenone cause the death of dopaminergic neurons in vitro and in vivo and are widely used to model Parkinson's disease. To identify regulated genes in such models, we performed serial analysis of gene expression on neuronal PC12 cells exposed to 6-hydroxydopamine. This revealed a striking increase in transcripts associated with the unfolded protein response. Immunoblotting confirmed phosphorylation of the key endoplasmic reticulum stress kinases IRE1alpha and PERK (PKR-like ER kinase) and induction of their downstream targets. There was a similar response to MPP+ and rotenone, but not to other apoptotic initiators. As evidence that endoplasmic reticulum stress contributes to neuronal death, sympathetic neurons from PERK null mice in which the capacity to respond to endoplasmic reticulum stress is compromised were more sensitive to 6-hydroxydopamine. Our findings, coupled with evidence from familial forms of Parkinson's disease, raise the possibility of widespread involvement of endoplasmic reticulum stress and the unfolded protein response in the pathophysiology of this disease.
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Article Expression of A53T mutant but not wild-type alpha-synuclein in PC12 cells induces alterations of the ubiquitin-dependent degradation system, loss of dopamine release, and autophagic cell death. free! 2001
Stefanis L, Larsen KE, Rideout HJ, Sulzer D, Greene LA. · Department of Pathology, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA. · J Neurosci. · Pubmed #11739566 links to free full text
Abstract: Alpha-synuclein mutations have been identified in certain families with Parkinson's disease (PD), and alpha-synuclein is a major component of Lewy bodies. Other genetic data indicate that the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic system is involved in PD pathogenesis. We have generated stable PC12 cell lines expressing wild-type or A53T mutant human alpha-synuclein. Lines expressing mutant but not wild-type alpha-synuclein show: (1) disruption of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic system, manifested by small cytoplasmic ubiquitinated aggregates and by an increase in polyubiquitinated proteins; (2) enhanced baseline nonapoptotic death; (3) marked accumulation of autophagic-vesicular structures; (4) impairment of lysosomal hydrolysis and proteasomal function; and (5) loss of catecholamine-secreting dense core granules and an absence of depolarization-induced dopamine release. Such findings raise the possibility that the primary abnormality in these cells may involve one or more deficits in the lysosomal and/or proteasomal degradation pathways, which in turn lead to loss of dopaminergic capacity and, ultimately, to death. These cells may serve as a model to study the effects of aberrant alpha-synuclein on dopaminergic cell function and survival.
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