Proteomic profiling of the substantia nigra demonstrates CNDP2 overexpression in Parkinson's disease
帕金
多巴胺能
神经保护
氧化应激
品脱1
细胞生物学
自噬
蛋白质组
疾病
生物标志物
作者
Virginie Licker,Mélanie Cote,Johannes Alexander Lobrinus,Neftali Rodrigo,Eniko Veronika Kovari,Denis F. Hochstrasser,Natacha Turck,Jean-Charles Sanchez,Pierre R. Burkhard
Despite decades of intensive investigations, the precise sequence of molecular events and the specific proteins mediating the degenerative process underlying Parkinson's disease (PD) remain unraveled. Proteomic strategies may provide unbiased tools to identify novel candidates and explore original mechanisms involved in PD. Substantia nigra pars compacta (SN) tissue, whose degeneration is the hallmark of PD, was dissected from neuropathologically confirmed PD patients (n=3) and control subjects (n=3), before being submitted to a comparative 2-DE analysis. The present study revealed a subset of neuronal and/or glial proteins that appears to be deregulated in PD and likely to contribute to neurodegeneration. Observed alterations not only consolidate well accepted concepts surrounding PD pathogenesis such as oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction but also point out to novel pathways. Among the latter, cytosolic non specific dipeptidase 2 (CNDP2), a relatively unknown protein not yet reported to be associated with PD pathogenesis, was shown to be increased in the SN of PD patients, as confirmed by Western blot. Immunohistochemical analyses demonstrated the presence of CNDP2 within the cytoplasm of SN dopaminergic neurons. Altogether, our findings support a key role of CNDP2 in PD neurodegeneration, by mechanisms that could involve oxidative stress, protein aggregation or inflammation. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Translational Proteomics.