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Extracellular high molecular weight α-synuclein oligomers induce cell death by disrupting the plasma membrane.


ABSTRACT: α-Synuclein (αS), the causative protein of Parkinson's disease and other α-synucleinopathies, aggregates from a low molecular weight form (LMW-αS) to a high molecular weight αS oligomer (HMW-αSo). Aggregated αS accumulates intracellularly, induces intrinsic apoptosis, is released extracellularly, and appears to propagate disease through prion-like spreading. Whether extracellular αS aggregates are cytotoxic, damage cell wall, or induce cell death is unclear. We investigated cytotoxicity and cell death caused by HMW-αSo or LMW-αS. Extracellular HMW-αSo was more cytotoxic than LMW-αS and was a crucial factor for inducing plasma membrane damage and cell death. HMW-αSo induced reactive oxygen species production and phospholipid peroxidation in the membrane, thereby impairing calcium homeostasis and disrupting plasma membrane integrity. HMW-αSo also induced extrinsic apoptosis and cell death by activating acidic sphingomyelinase. Thus, as extracellular HMW-αSo causes neuronal injury and death via cellular transmission and direct plasma membrane damage, we propose an additional disease progression pathway for α-synucleinopathies.

SUBMITTER: Ito N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10539356 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Extracellular high molecular weight α-synuclein oligomers induce cell death by disrupting the plasma membrane.

Ito Naohito N   Tsuji Mayumi M   Adachi Naoki N   Nakamura Shiro S   Sarkar Avijite Kumer AK   Ikenaka Kensuke K   Aguirre César C   Kimura Atsushi Michael AM   Kiuchi Yuji Y   Mochizuki Hideki H   Teplow David B DB   Ono Kenjiro K  

NPJ Parkinson's disease 20230928 1


α-Synuclein (αS), the causative protein of Parkinson's disease and other α-synucleinopathies, aggregates from a low molecular weight form (LMW-αS) to a high molecular weight αS oligomer (HMW-αSo). Aggregated αS accumulates intracellularly, induces intrinsic apoptosis, is released extracellularly, and appears to propagate disease through prion-like spreading. Whether extracellular αS aggregates are cytotoxic, damage cell wall, or induce cell death is unclear. We investigated cytotoxicity and cell  ...[more]

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