自噬
细胞生物学
生物
溶酶体
分泌物
半乳糖凝集素
分泌途径
共核细胞病
内体
α-突触核蛋白
帕金森病
细胞内
高尔基体
内质网
生物化学
病理
酶
细胞凋亡
医学
疾病
作者
Kevin Burbidge,David J. Rademacher,Jessica Mattick,Stephanie R. Zack,Andrea Grillini,Luc Bousset,Ochan Kwon,Konrad Kubicki,Alexander M. Simon,Ronald Melki,E. M. Campbell
出处
期刊:Autophagy
[Informa]
日期:2021-10-06
卷期号:18 (5): 1020-1048
被引量:21
标识
DOI:10.1080/15548627.2021.1967615
摘要
Numerous lines of evidence support the premise that the misfolding and subsequent accumulation of SNCA/α-synuclein (synuclein alpha) is responsible for the underlying neuronal pathology observed in Parkinson disease (PD) and other synucleinopathies. Moreover, the cell-to-cell transfer of these misfolded SNCA species is thought to be responsible for disease progression and the spread of cellular pathology throughout the brain. Previous work has shown that when exogenous, misfolded SNCA fibrils enter cells through endocytosis, they can damage and rupture the membranes of their endocytotic vesicles in which they are trafficked. Rupture of these vesicular membranes exposes intralumenal glycans leading to galectin protein binding, subsequent autophagic protein recruitment, and, ultimately, their introduction into the autophagic-lysosomal pathway. Increasing evidence indicates that both pathological and non-pathological SNCA species undergo autophagy-dependent unconventional secretion. While other proteins have also been shown to be secreted from cells by autophagy, what triggers this release process and how these specific proteins are recruited to a secretory autophagic pathway is largely unknown. Here, we use a human midbrain dopamine (mDA) neuronal culture model to provide evidence in support of a cellular mechanism that explains the cell-to-cell transfer of pathological forms of SNCA that are observed in PD. We demonstrate that LGALS3 (galectin 3) mediates the release of SNCA following vesicular damage. SNCA release is also dependent on TRIM16 (tripartite motif containing 16) and ATG16L1 (autophagy related 16 like 1), providing evidence that secretion of SNCA is mediated by an autophagic secretory pathway.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI