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The release of toxic oligomers from α-synuclein fibrils induces dysfunction in neuronal cells.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Chen, Serene W 
Camino, José D 

Abstract

The self-assembly of α-synuclein (αS) into intraneuronal inclusion bodies is a key characteristic of Parkinson's disease. To define the nature of the species giving rise to neuronal damage, we have investigated the mechanism of action of the main αS populations that have been observed to form progressively during fibril growth. The αS fibrils release soluble prefibrillar oligomeric species with cross-β structure and solvent-exposed hydrophobic clusters. αS prefibrillar oligomers are efficient in crossing and permeabilize neuronal membranes, causing cellular insults. Short fibrils are more neurotoxic than long fibrils due to the higher proportion of fibrillar ends, resulting in a rapid release of oligomers. The kinetics of released αS oligomers match the observed kinetics of toxicity in cellular systems. In addition to previous evidence that αS fibrils can spread in different brain areas, our in vitro results reveal that αS fibrils can also release oligomeric species responsible for an immediate dysfunction of the neurons in the vicinity of these species.

Description

Keywords

Amyloid, Animals, Calcium, Cell Line, Tumor, Cells, Cultured, Humans, Inclusion Bodies, Kinetics, Microscopy, Confocal, Neurons, Parkinson Disease, Protein Aggregation, Pathological, Protein Multimerization, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, alpha-Synuclein, Rats

Journal Title

Nat Commun

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

Volume Title

12

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC