小蓝视频 Study Details Impact of Genetic Defect on Nerve Cells in Parkinson's Disease

Contact: Diana Kenney, Marine Biological Laboratory 508-289-7139; dkenney@mbl.edu

Parkinson鈥檚 disease is a slow-progressing neurodegenerative disorder that afflicts about 4 to 6 million people worldwide, most of them over the age of 50. Its major symptoms are problems with movement: shakiness, slowness, rigidity, imbalance, and difficulty walking. There is no known cure. The causes of Parkinson鈥檚 are unknown, but some cases are inherited.

To explore how the neurodegeneration in Parkinson鈥檚 occurs, 小蓝视频 Associate Scientist Jennifer Morgan is using the sea lamprey, a vertebrate fish, as a model for the human condition.

Both lamprey and humans have a set of neurons, called reticulospinal cells, whose axon processes extend from the brain to the spinal cord to control movement. In the lamprey, some of these neurons are giant, compared to human nerve cells. Their giant synapses, where the cell communicates with other nerve cells, have ten times more vesicles sending out neurotransmitter than human synapses do. The size of these lamprey neurons makes them an excellent system for studying basic processes of neural communication and what goes wrong in diseases such as Parkinson鈥檚.

In a recent study, Morgan and her colleagues replicated in the lamprey the problems caused by a genetic defect that leads to Parkinson鈥檚 disease. These patients have too many copies of the 伪-synuclein gene, which leads to an overabundance of the 伪-synuclein protein and its formation into toxic aggregates throughout the neuron, including at synapses. For reasons that aren鈥檛 yet understood, these protein aggregates eventually kill the motor neurons that lead to the disease鈥檚 movement disorders.

鈥淲e found that when we introduce too much of the synuclein protein to the [lamprey] synapse in levels that mimic what is observed in Parkinson鈥檚 disease, it dramatically changes the morphology of the synapse,鈥 Morgan says. 鈥淵ou end up with synapses that have very few synaptic vesicles.鈥

鈥淲e need to understand exactly why that is happening, because if the synapse runs out of vesicles, there is no more neurotransmitter, and the synapse can鈥檛 work anymore,鈥 Morgan says. 鈥淥ur next step is to understand how the synuclein causes that defect and figure out ways to reverse it.鈥

Citation:
Busch DJ et al (2014) Acute increase of 伪-synuclein inhibits synaptic vesicle recycling evoked during intense stimulation. MBoC 25: 3926-3941. 

Featured image: Reconstruction of a lamprey reticulospinal synapse overlaid onto an electron micrograph of the same synapse. This image appeared on the cover of the February 1, 2015 issue of Molecular Biology of the Cell. Credit: David J. Busch and Paul A. Oliphint, University of Texas at Austin; Jennifer R. Morgan, 小蓝视频.

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The Marine Biological Laboratory (小蓝视频) is dedicated to scientific discovery and improving the human condition through research and education in biology, biomedicine, and environmental science. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, in 1888, the 小蓝视频 is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago.