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Annotation


Nemani VM, Lu W, Berge V, Nakamura K, Onoa B, Lee MK, Chaudhry FA, Nicoll RA, Edwards RH. Increased expression of alpha-synuclein reduces neurotransmitter release by inhibiting synaptic vesicle reclustering after endocytosis. Neuron. 2010 Jan 14;65(1):66-79. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Excess α-Synuclein Sends Synapses Sputtering

Comment by:  Subhojit Roy
Submitted 18 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2010

Our goal in this study was to try connecting the dots between two key pathologic events: modestly elevated α-synuclein levels within the neuron and the ultimate synaptic dysfunction. We used a cell-biological approach that allowed us to analyze and quantify thousands of α-synuclein overexpressing boutons. Based on the data, we suggest a cascade of pathologic events initiated by modest elevations of α-synuclein and culminating in synaptic damage. Studies by Nemani et al. focus on the effects of elevated α-synuclein on specific steps within the synaptic release/recycling machinery by directly imaging the synaptic cycle in α-synuclein transfected neurons.

First, it is important to emphasize that using a variety of methods, both studies show at a single-neuron level that the overall synaptic defect induced by modestly elevated α-synuclein is an inhibition of neurotransmitter release. Thus, collectively, these studies provide a firm pathologic role that can be attributed to α-synuclein overexpression. The studies by Nemani et al. also show a dose-dependent effect of excessive...  Read more


  Primary News: Excess α-Synuclein Sends Synapses Sputtering

Comment by:  Robert Edwards
Submitted 18 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2010

The background for our work is that α-synuclein normally localizes to the axon terminal of essentially all neurons, but its role, if any, in neurotransmitter release has remained very unclear. In general, knockout mice have shown either no effect or conflicting effects on synaptic transmission. Increased expression of α-synuclein causes Parkinson disease (PD)—duplication and triplication of the wild-type gene cause severe familial PD, and the protein accumulates in all sporadic PD. In light of this, we wondered what overexpression might do to synaptic transmission. This seemed particularly interesting because overexpression of wild-type α-synuclein in mice actually fails to produce degeneration, and an effect on transmitter release would be easier to interpret in the absence of toxicity.

To understand how α-synuclein affects neurotransmitter release, we used a combination of primary neuronal culture and genetic manipulation in mice. The reason is that, although culture is very powerful to dissect molecular mechanism, it suffers from greater variability and has more potential...  Read more


  Primary News: Excess α-Synuclein Sends Synapses Sputtering

Comment by:  Martin Ingelsson, ARF Advisor
Submitted 18 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2010

The work by Scott and colleagues is of great interest as it is trying to pinpoint the molecular details in the synaptic pathology caused by a modest transgenic overexpression of α-synuclein. The authors found that PK-resistant and abnormally phosphorylated α-synuclein tends to accumulate in dysfunctional boutons. They also elegantly demonstrated that such boutons display a gradual reduction in levels of certain endogenous presynaptic proteins. In an attempt to extend their findings to human disease, they looked for and confirmed similar alterations on a DLB brain section.

I think another transgenic model that moderately overexpresses another neuronal protein (e.g., APP) should have been looked at in parallel (to exclude that the effects seen are merely an effect of protein overproduction). Also, more human cases should have been included to verify that the observed differences are truly relevant to disease. Even so, the findings are intriguing, and the described model would be very useful to test effects of heat-shock proteins and other putative rescuing molecules. Moreover,...  Read more


  Primary News: Excess α-Synuclein Sends Synapses Sputtering

Comment by:  Walter J. Schulz-Schaeffer
Submitted 18 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2010

Both papers present evidence that the pathophysiological mechanism in synucleinopathies is not neuronal cell death but a synaptic dysfunction; that is very interesting. With regard to the clinical symptoms in PD, (also PDD and DLB), the synaptic pathology is due to a decrease in neurotransmitter release. The two publications provide us with a link between α-synuclein overexpression and an impairment of vesicle turnover. With this approach, it might be possible to explain the clinical symptoms of PD. Both papers show that α-synuclein-related pathology is not restricted to dopaminergic neurons.

The conclusion to be drawn from the results of these papers is that PD and DLB research should move away from models of α-synuclein-related toxicity or cell death that can be achieved only by unphysiologically high overexpression of α-synuclein. Rather, research should concentrate on synaptic failure associated with moderately altered α-synuclein levels. The link to α-synuclein aggregation was only drawn in the Scott et al. paper.

View all comments by Walter J. Schulz-Schaeffer


  Primary News: Excess α-Synuclein Sends Synapses Sputtering

Comment by:  Kostas Vekrellis
Submitted 18 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2010

α-synuclein and Synaptic Failure in PD
α-synuclein has been biochemically and genetically linked to sporadic and familial PD. Mutations or multiplications of the α-synuclein gene cause familial forms of PD (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997; Krüger et al., 1998; Singleton et al., 2003; Zarranz et al., 2004). The aberrant function of α-synuclein is not understood, although there is evidence that abnormal folding and aggregation may play a role and that the toxic α-synuclein species may be oligomeric intermediates. It has been shown that α-synuclein is highly enriched in presynaptic terminals. At this site, it could be acting as a modifier of synaptic vesicle recycling, dopamine storage, and release at nerve terminals. Recent work has also suggested a role for α-synuclein in SNARE-mediated exocytosis at the synapse. In this respect, the synaptic role of α-synuclein is based primarily on the...  Read more
Comments on Related News
  Related News: α-Synuclein’s Day Job: To Chaperone SNARE Complexes?

Comment by:  Subhojit Roy
Submitted 21 October 2010  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2010

By directly examining SNARE assembly, Burre et al. present good evidence that α-synuclein plays a role in facilitating the assembly of SNARE complexes. They also show that this facilitating process depends on synaptic activity and propose that the physical binding of α-synuclein to VAMP may ultimately mediate the process. However, there were no changes in synaptic transmission in acute brain slices from WT, synuclein overexpressing mice, or mice lacking all synucleins.

We recently reported that excessive α-synuclein induces a series of pathologic changes including deficits in neurotransmitter release (Scott et al., 2010), in general agreement with a recent study from Robert Edwards's group (Nemani et al., 2010), as well as other reports on cellular and cell-free systems (Larsen et al., 2006; Darios et al., 2010). More recently, we have performed additional electrophysiologic experiments in WT and α-synuclein -/- neurons, in collaboration with Iustin Tabarean, an electrophysiologist at Scripps.

Though we do not find significant neurotransmitter release deficits in...  Read more

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