Now, Harvard Medical School researchers have mechanistically connected this
In healthy cells, damaged mitochondria are broken down and disposed of by a process called selective autophagy, a term stemming from Greek roots that translates as «
Proteins linked to Parkinson’s
Mitochondrial damage triggers activation of twoMost recently, scientists have been studying how cells recognize these disposal signals and which proteins are involved further downstream in the disposal process.
Initial key insights into the downstream mechanism were suggested several years ago by the finding that the autophagy cargo receptor protein OPTN functions together with the TBK1 protein kinase in the removal of pathogenic bacteria from cells via autophagy. Interestingly, both OPTN and very recently TBK1 were also found to be mutated in ALS, but how these proteins contribute to this neurodegenerative disease has remained poorly understood.
Now scientists led by Wade Harper have mechanistically connected these two sets of proteins and have described a multistep mitochondrial quality control pathway. Upstream
Importantly, binding of the
Connection to ALS
By using state-«This is the first time we could mechanistically show how ubiquitination of damaged mitochondria promotes their clearance, and suggests that mitophagy defects potentially contribute to ALS as well as Parkinson’s disease," said Harper, who is Bert and Natalie Vallee Professor of Molecular Pathology and chair of the HMS Department of Cell Biology.
Alban Ordureau, a postdoctoral fellow in the Harper lab and a
«The story here focuses on how, once mitochondria are ubiquitinated, they are recognized by the cell and gotten rid of by proteins implicated in two distinct neurodegenerative diseases," said Ordureau.
Stress and sensitivity
«If there is stress happening in the same cell in one pathway, that might cause defects in other pathways," Heo said. «That could be why we see similar characteristics in different diseases with different origins.»In Parkinson’s disease, neurons that make the neurotransmitter dopamine are defective while in ALS, the motor neurons do not perform as they should.
«There are some very complex relationships between different mutations that are going to lead to disease and which cell types they act in," Harper said. «Depending on the cell type, you get one or the other disease.»
One idea is that individual types of neurons are sensitive to toxic proteins or toxic
«The surprising thing is that the Parkinson’s genes are functioning upstream of a pathway that’s mutated downstream in motor neuron disease," Harper said. «So there is a genetic sensitivity within the pathway that must be different in different cells.»
It may turn out that this is a general mechanism that cells use to get rid of a variety of damaged material in different kinds of neurons.
«We’re starting to work that out," Harper said.
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health grant R37 NS083524, Biogen and the Edward R. and Anne G. Lefler Center for the Study of Neurodegenerative Disorders at HMS. Harper is a consultant for Millennium: the Takeda Oncology Company and Biogen.
Source :http://hms.harvard.edu/news/damage-control