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Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College New -Synuclein Mutants: How Do They Contribute To Parkinson’s Disease?

Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

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New a -Synuclein Mutants: How Do They Contribute To Parkinson’s Disease?. Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College. Road Map. Parkinson’s Disease -Synuclein Misfolding Model System & Hypothesis Results Conclusion. Neurodegeneration. Protein. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Sara Herrera

Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of BiologyLake Forest College

New -Synuclein Mutants: How Do They Contribute To Parkinson’s Disease?

Page 2: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

•Parkinson’s Disease

-Synuclein Misfolding

•Model System & Hypothesis

•Results

•Conclusion

Road Map

Page 3: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Parkinson’s Disease

Alzheimer’s Disease

Huntington’s Disease

Prion Disease

Spinocerebellar Ataxia

-Synuclein

Amyloid -peptide

Huntingtin

Prion protein

Ataxin

Disease Protein

Protein Misfolding

Cell Death

Neurodegeneration

Page 4: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Parkinson’s Disease

• Affects over 4 million people worldwide

• Slowness of movement, resting tremors, postural instability

• Death of dopaminergic neurons that control movement

• Protein aggregates within these neurons

Diseased Healthy

Perves et al. Neuroscience, 2nd edition

Page 5: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

-Synuclein

synuclein

Functions Unknown

140 amino acidsPresynaptic Terminals of neurons

Cytoplasmic Protein

Page 6: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

-Synuclein Misfolding & Toxicity

Native -Synuclein Misfolded -Synuclein Aggregated -Synuclein

(Lewy Bodies)

Toxicity(Cell Death)

Spillantini et al., 1997

Page 7: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

-synWild-type

A30P

A53T

A30P/A53T

-syn

-syn

-syn

Natural Mutations-Genetic PD

Artificial Mutation

Known Familial PD Mutants

Normal Gene-In all humans

-synE46K Newly Discovered, 2004

Page 8: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

S. cerevisiae

Prion disease model (1998)HD model (1999)PD model (2003)

Budding Yeast Model System

Why Yeast?1. Conservation of genes2. Sequenced Genome

Page 9: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

DebBurman Yeast Model

19 kDa

62 kDa 54 kDa

28 kDa

-syn GFP

-syn

Predictions Our Model

In our model -synuclein runs 8-10 kDa higher on protein gels.

What causes this altered migration of -synuclein?

Johnson, 2003

Sharma, 2004

Page 10: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Systematic Examination of Possible -Synuclein Modifications

•Phosphorylation

•Glycosylation

•Lipidation

•Ubiquitination

•Nitrosylation

•Oxidation

Post-Translational Modifications

Page 11: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Post-Translational Modification

-Lee, et al. 2000, demonstrated that -synuclein was nitrated in Lewy Bodies.

-Souza, et al. 2000, demonstrated that nitrating and oxidizing agents can nitrate and oxidize -synuclein at tyrosine residues, resulting in oligomers

-Fujiwara, et al. 2003, showed that -synuclein can be phosphorylation at Serine 129. This promotes fibril formation.

Page 12: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Creation of Post-Translational Modification Mutants

GFP

GFP

GFP

GFP

GFP

Y125F

Y39F

Y133F

S87A

S129A

-Synuclein Mutants CreatedSeen in PD Patients

Nitrosylation

Oxidation

Phosphorylation

Ubiquitination

Glycosylationsites unknown

Page 13: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Two Stories

Chapter 1: Characterizing The Newly Discovered E46K Mutant

Chapter 2: Role of Post-Translational Modifications in -Synuclein

Page 14: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

E46K: Hypotheses and Aims

1. Expression of E46K -synuclein will misfold, aggregate, and be toxic to yeast.

2. Express wild-type and familial mutant E46K -synuclein in S. cerevisiae yeast model.

3. Evaluate cellular localization and toxicity of wild-type versus E46K familial mutant form of -synuclein expressed in S. cerevisiae.

1. Construct E46K mutant

Hypothesis

Aims

Page 15: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Site-Directed Mutagenesis

Methylated plasmid

-Glu residues were mutated to Lys (E K)

Methylation Mutagenesis

Mutated plasmid

XX

XX

Transformation into E. Coli

X

Primers: 1 contains target mutationWT gene

Aim 1: Construction of E46K Mutant

Page 16: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Western Analysis

Transfer ProteinsHeat to separate proteins Incubate Blot

with Anti-bodies

Development of Blot

Visualization of Proteins

Aim 2: Expression of E46K Mutant

Page 17: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Aim 2: Expression of E46K

Western Analysis

148

98

64

50

36

22

16

~34kDaGFP

MW Marker

E46K~124 kDa

~62 kDa

-E46K -synuclein will have SDS insoluble aggregates-Dimer formation of E46K -synuclein will be visualized

Predictions

Page 18: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

GFP

Wt S

yn-G

FP

Y39F S

yn-G

FP

Y125F

Syn

-GFP

E46K S

yn-G

FP

S129A

Syn

-GFP

~62kDa

148

98

64

50

36

MWkDa

~34kDa

98

64

50

36

22

Syn GFP

— + + + +— — —W

t Syn

-GFP

A53T S

yn-G

FP

Db Syn

-GFP

+—A30

P Syn

-GFP

~28kDa

~34kDa

~62kDa

+

Western Blot

Results: Expression of Familial Mutant E46K

-E46K runs 8-10 kDa higher than predicted -Lack of SDS insoluble aggregates

Coomassie StainSharma, 2004.

Page 19: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Optical Density and Spotting Growth Analyses

Familial mutant -synuclein will be toxic to yeast cells

E46K mutant -synuclein will be the most toxic to yeast cells

Wild-type -synuclein will not be toxic to yeast cells

Predictions

Aim 3: Examining Toxicity of -Synuclein

Page 20: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

0 10 20 30 40 50

pYES2

GFP

WT

A30P

A53T

A53T/ A30P

E46K

Time (hours)

Lo

g C

ell

Co

nc

en

tra

tio

n

Results: E46K Mutant -Synuclein Expression Is Toxic To Yeast

E46K expressing cells show a major lag in growth

Growth Curve

Page 21: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Results: E46K Mutant -Synuclein Expression Is Toxic To Yeast

5X Less 5X Less 5X Less

Spotting

Glucose (non-inducing) Galactose (inducing)

Parent Vector

GFP

E46K

A30P

A53T

WT

E46K expressing cells show no major decrease in growth rates

Page 22: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Aim 3: Localization of E46K

Live Cell GFP Microscopy

E46K-GFP(CT)

-E46K -synuclein expression= foci formation-Localization to plasma membrane

Predictions

Page 23: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

E46K-GFP A30P/A53T-GFPA53T-GFPA30P-GFPWt-GFP

Results: -Synuclein Localizes to the Periphery & Forms Foci

Live Cell GFP Microscopy

- Halos are preserved -E46K shows increase foci formation compared to other familial mutants

Page 24: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Wild-type -Synuclein

Misfolded E46K -Synuclein

Toxicity

No Toxicity

-Synuclein Folding

Live Cell Microscopy

Toxicity

Increased Foci Formation

-Synuclein Misfolding & Aggregation In vivo

Increased Foci Formation

Page 25: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Chapter 2

Role of Post-Translational Modifications in -Synuclein

Page 26: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Post-Translational: Hypotheses & Aims

1. Post-translational modifications of -synuclein will decrease its misfolding and aggregation.

2. Expression of post-translational mutant -synuclein will not be toxic to yeast.

Hypothesis

Aims

1. Construct post-translational S129A, Y39F, and Y125 mutants

2. Express wild-type and mutant S129A, Y39F, and Y125 -synuclein in S. cerevisiae yeast model.

3. Evaluate cellular localization and toxicity of wild-type versus mutant forms of -synuclein expressed in S. cerevisiae.

Page 27: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Aim 2: Expression of -Synuclein

Western Analysis148

98

64

50

36

22

16

~34kDaGFP

MW Marker

~54 kDa

WT

S129A

Y125F

Y39F

~62 kDa

-Post-translational mutants will migrate at lower molecular weights-WT -synuclein will run at ~62 kDa-Protein expression will be equal in all lanes

Predictions

Page 28: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

GFP

Wt S

yn-G

FP

Y39F S

yn-G

FP

Y125F

Syn

-GFP

S129A

Syn

-GFP

~62 kDa

148

98

64

50

36

MWkDa

~34kDa

Western Blot

Results: -Synuclein Expression of S129A, Y39F, and Y125F Mutants

Coomassie Stain

-Surprisingly post-translational mutants run 8-10 kDa higher than predicted -Lack of SDS insoluble aggregates

Page 29: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Optical Density and Spotting: Growth Analysis

S129A, Y39F, & Y125F mutant -synuclein will not be toxic to yeast cells

Wild-type -synuclein will not be toxic to yeast cells

Aim 3: Examining Toxicity of -Synuclein

Predictions

Page 30: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Results: S129A, Y39F, and Y125F Mutant -Synuclein Expression Is Toxic To Yeast

Lo

g C

ell

Co

nce

ntr

atio

n

Time (hours)

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

0 10 20 30 40 50

S129A

Y39F

WT

Y125F

Growth Curve

- Post-translational mutants show major growth deficiencies

Page 31: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

-Synuclein Expression of S129A, Y39F, and Y125F mutants

Non-inducing Inducing

Parent Vector

GFP

Y39F

Y125F

S129A

WT

Spotting

- Post-translational mutants show minor growth deficiencies

Page 32: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Aim 3: Localization of -Synuclein Mutants

Live Cell GFP Microscopy

S129A-GFP(CT) Y39F-GFP(CT) Y125F-GFP(CT)

-Post-translational mutant -synuclein will localize to plasma membrane

Predictions

Page 33: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

S129A-GFPY125F-GFPY39F-GFP

GFP

Wt-GFP

Results: S129A, Y39F, and Y125F Mutant -Synuclein Localizes Near Yeast Plasma

Membranes

Live Cell GFP Microscopy

- Halos are preserved -Post-translational modifications show lack of foci formation

Page 34: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Conclusions

1. Familial E46K mutant -synuclein induces toxicity upon expression

2. Increased foci formation with E46K -synuclein expression

3. -Synuclein’s increased size in not due to phosphorylation at Serine 129 and nitrosylation at Tyrosines 39 and 125

4. S129A, Y39F, and Y125F mutant -synuclein showed unexpected increase in toxicity

5. In vivo membrane association of S129A, Y39F, and Y125F -synuclein

Page 35: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Discussion

E46K Toxicity May Be Related To Increased Misfolding

Zarranz, et al., 2004: Study showed that E46K -syn is more proneto aggregation compared to other familial mutants

E46K had extensive peripheral localization and increased foci formation compared to other -syn expressing cells

Increased aggregation of E46K -syn may increase its toxicity = cell death

OD600 showed that E46K cells have large lag in growth; spottingassays show no inhibited growth rate.

Page 36: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Discussion

Increased Size: Not Due to Phosphorylation or Nitrosylation

DebBurman yeast model: -syn ran ~8-10 kDa higher

-Syn migrated higher than predicted due to post-translation modificationson Ser129 & Tyr 39 and 125

No change in migration patterns of -syn deficient for these residues

Increased size not due to phosphorylation or nitrosylation

Increased size maybe due to other modifications

Page 37: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Discussion

Post-translational Mutants Showed Unexpected Increase In Toxicity

Giasson, et al., 2002: nitrosylation and phosphorylation modifications may be responsible for inclusions seen in PD patients

Formation of inclusions coincides with disease onset

We expected to see less toxicity when key sites are mutated

Phosphorylation or nitrosylation modifications maybe beneficial to -syn expressing cells

Page 38: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Discussion

In vivo membrane association of S129A, Y39F, and Y125F -Synuclein

DebBurman yeast model: Peripheral localization of wild-type -syn

Post-Translational mutant-syn localized to yeast plasma membrane

-Syn contains a motif that has the ability to bind phospholipids vesicles

The cytoplasm of yeast cells is smaller than those in neurons; -syn may have easier ability to bind to membranes

Page 39: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Future Studies

1. Examine other -synuclein residues linked to nitrosylation and phosphorylation sites.

2. Examine other post-translational modification sites linked to -synuclein misfolding.

3. Assessment of stability of mutant forms of -synuclein in S. cerevisiae.

Page 40: Sara Herrera Advisor: Shubhik K. DebBurman Department of Biology Lake Forest College

Acknowledgements

DebBurman LabDr. Shubhik DebBurman

Isaac Holmes

Nijee Sharma

Katrina Brandis

Ruja Shrestha

Lavinia Sintean

Tasneem Saylawala

Arun George Paul

Jessica Price

NIH

NSF