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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Desplats P, Lee HJ, Bae EJ, Patrick C, Rockenstein E, Crews L, Spencer B, Masliah E, Lee SJ. Inclusion formation and neuronal cell death through neuron-to-neuron transmission of alpha-synuclein. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Aug 4;106(31):13010-5. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Research Brief: α-synuclein Spoils the Neural Neighborhood

Comment by:  Bharathi Shrikanth Gadad
Submitted 10 August 2009  |  Permalink Posted 10 August 2009
  I recommend this paper

This paper seems to be interesting, revealing an absolute requirement for intracellular delivery of the fibrillated alpha-synuclein to induce Lewy-body like inclusions. The cell-to-cell communication requires intracellular seeding, which is, however, revealing a pattern similar to prion proteins. Hence the question arises whether alpha-synuclein acts like a prion.

View all comments by Bharathi Shrikanth Gadad

  Comment by:  Lawrence Rajendran
Submitted 20 August 2009  |  Permalink Posted 20 August 2009

It was a pleasure to read this work from the Masliah/Lee duo on the cell-to-cell transmission of α-synuclein (Desplats et al., 2009). This work shows that α-synuclein can be released from cells and is taken up by the neighboring cell, thereby aiding in a progressive spread of the protein. This work continues Seung-Jae Lee’s previous work showing that α-synuclein could be released (Lee et al., 2005) and taken up in neurons (Lee et al., 2008; Lee et al., 2008). While the exact mechanism of the release is currently not well defined, this group has done elegant cell biology work to study the internalization mechanism. They show that fluorescently labeled, recombinant α-synuclein is internalized from the extracellular lumen via a dynamin-1-dependent pathway in vitro. This also occurred in vivo, where injection of GFP-labeled mouse cortical neuronal stem cells into the hippocampus of α-synuclein-transgenic mice led to the efficient uptake of the host...  Read more
Comments on Related News
  Related News: Modeling Sporadic PD in a Dish?

Comment by:  Pam McClean
Submitted 10 October 2011  |  Permalink Posted 10 October 2011

I think this paper adds to the increasing literature on the consequences of extracellular α-synuclein and its role in PD pathogenesis. It represents an important validation of several recent studies showing that α-synuclein can be taken up by neurons from the extracellular space (Desplats et al., 2009; Danzer et al., 2011), that exogenously applied α-synuclein can seed aggregation of intracellular α-synuclein (Luk et al., 2009; Danzer et al., 2009), that α-synuclein oligomers can be transmitted from neuron to neuron and transported in both anterograde and retrograde direction within neurons (Danzer et al., 2011), and that extracellular α-synuclein can have detrimental effects in the recipient cells (Desplats et al., 2009; Emmanouilidou et al., 2010;   Read more
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