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Elevated α-synuclein mRNA levels in individual UV-laser-microdissected dopaminergic substantia nigra neurons in idiopathic Parkinson's disease

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TLDR
By combining optimized UV-laser microdissection- and quantitative RT–PCR-techniques with suitable PCR assays, significantly elevated α-synuclein mRNA levels in individual, surviving neuromelanin- and tyrosine hydroxylase-positive substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons from idiopathic PD brains compared to controls are detected.
Abstract
The presynaptic protein alpha-synuclein is involved in several neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease (PD). In rare familial forms of PD, causal mutations (PARK1) as well as multiplications (PARK4) of the alpha-synuclein gene have been identified. In sporadic, idiopathic PD, abnormal accumulation and deposition of alpha-synuclein might also cause degeneration of dopaminergic midbrain neurons, the clinically most relevant neuronal population in PD. Thus, cell-specific quantification of alpha-synuclein expression-levels in dopaminergic neurons from idiopathic PD patients in comparison to controls would provide essential information about contributions of alpha-synuclein to the etiology of PD. However, a number of previous studies addressing this question at the tissue-level yielded varying results regarding alpha-synuclein expression. To increase specificity, we developed a cell-specific approach for mRNA quantification that also took into account the important issue of variable RNA integrities of the individual human postmortem brain samples. We demonstrate that PCR -amplicon size can confound quantitative gene-expression analysis, in particular of partly degraded RNA. By combining optimized UV-laser microdissection- and quantitative RT-PCR-techniques with suitable PCR assays, we detected significantly elevated alpha-synuclein mRNA levels in individual, surviving neuromelanin- and tyrosine hydroxylase-positive substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons from idiopathic PD brains compared to controls. These results strengthen the pathophysiologic role of transcriptional dysregulation of the alpha-synuclein gene in sporadic PD.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

α-Synuclein in Parkinson’s Disease

TL;DR: The role of α-synuclein in Parkinson's disease has been investigated in this article, showing that α-Synuclein may contribute to PD pathogenesis in a number of ways, but it is generally thought that its aberrant soluble oligomeric conformations, termed protofibrils, are the toxic species that mediate disruption of cellular homeostasis and neuronal death.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cerebellum in Parkinson’s disease

TL;DR: The role of the cerebellum in Parkinson's disease is investigated in this paper, where functional or morphological modulations were detected related to akinesia/rigidity, tremor, gait disturbance, dyskinesia and some non-motor symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of mitochondrial fusion by α-synuclein is rescued by PINK1, Parkin and DJ-1.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated with in vitro vesicle fusion experiments that αS has an inhibitory function on membrane fusion and mitochondrial fragmentation induced by expression of αS is rescued by coexpression of PINK1, parkin or DJ‐1 but not the PD‐associated mutations Pink1 G309D and parkin Δ1–79 or byDJ‐1 C106A.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurotoxin-based models of Parkinson's disease.

Jordi Bové, +1 more
- 01 Jun 2012 - 
TL;DR: How epidemiological data may help to validate a specific model with data linking a lower risk of developing PD with nutritional/consumption habits or with a specific chronic drug therapy is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methylation Regulates Alpha-Synuclein Expression and Is Decreased in Parkinson's Disease Patients' Brains

TL;DR: Methylation of SNCA intron 1 was reduced in DNA from sporadic PD patients' substantia nigra, putamen, and cortex, pointing toward a yet unappreciated epigenetic regulation of S NCA expression in PD.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mutation in the α-synuclein gene identified in families with Parkinson's disease

TL;DR: A mutation was identified in the α-synuclein gene, which codes for a presynaptic protein thought to be involved in neuronal plasticity, in the Italian kindred and in three unrelated families of Greek origin with autosomal dominant inheritance for the PD phenotype.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alpha-synuclein in Lewy bodies.

TL;DR: Strong staining of Lewy bodies from idiopathic Parkinson's disease with antibodies for α-synuclein, a presynaptic protein of unknown function which is mutated in some familial cases of the disease, indicates that the LewY bodies from these two diseases may have identical compositions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parkinson's disease: Mechanisms and models

TL;DR: PD models based on the manipulation of PD genes should prove valuable in elucidating important aspects of the disease, such as selective vulnerability of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons to the degenerative process.
Journal ArticleDOI

The RIN: an RNA integrity number for assigning integrity values to RNA measurements

TL;DR: The results show the importance of taking characteristics of several regions of the recorded electropherogram into account in order to get a robust and reliable prediction of RNA integrity, especially if compared to traditional methods.
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