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Cathepsin D expression level affects alpha-synuclein processing, aggregation, and toxicity in vivo

Valerie Cullen, Maria Lindfors, Juliana Ng, Anders Paetau, Erika Swinton, Piotr Kolodziej, Heather Boston, Paul Säftig, John Woulfe, Mel Β. Feany, Liisa Myllykangas, Michael G. Schlossmacher, Jaana Tyynelä

Molecular Brain · 2009 · ▲ 281 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elevated SNCA gene expression and intracellular accumulation of the encoded alpha-synuclein (aSyn) protein are associated with the development of Parkinson disease (PD). To date, few enzymes have been examined for their ability to degrade aSyn. Here, we explore the effects of CTSD gene expression, which encodes the lysosomal protease cathepsin D (CathD), on aSyn processing. RESULTS: Over-expression of human CTSD cDNA in dopaminergic MES23.5 cell cultures induced the marked proteolysis of exogenously expressed aSyn proteins in a dose-dependent manner. Unexpectedly, brain extractions, Western blotting and ELISA quantification revealed evidence for reduced levels of soluble endogenous aSyn in ctsd knock-out mice. However, these CathD-deficient mice also contained elevated levels of insoluble, oligomeric aSyn species, as detected by formic acid extraction. In accordance, immunohistochemical studies of ctsd-mutant brain from mice, sheep and humans revealed selective synucleinopathy-like changes that varied slightly among the three species. These changes included intracellular aSyn accumulation and formation of ubiquitin-positive inclusions. Furthermore, using an established Drosophila model of human synucleinopathy, we observed markedly enhanced retinal toxicity in ctsd-null flies. CONCLUSION: We conclude from these complementary investigations that: one, CathD can effectively degrade excess aSyn in dopaminergic cells; two, ctsd gene mutations result in a lysosomal storage disorder that includes microscopic and biochemical evidence of aSyn misprocessing; and three, CathD deficiency facilitates aSyn toxicity. We therefore postulate that CathD promotes 'synucleinase' activity, and that enhancing its function may lower aSyn concentrations in vivo.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1186/1756-6606-2-5
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2026-06-05 MST

Cite this

APA
Cullen, V., Lindfors, M., Ng, J., Paetau, A., Swinton, E., Kolodziej, P., Boston, H., Säftig, P., Woulfe, J., Feany, M.�., Myllykangas, L., Schlossmacher, M.G., &amp; Tyynelä, J. (2009). Cathepsin D expression level affects alpha-synuclein processing, aggregation, and toxicity in vivo. <em>Molecular Brain</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-6606-2-5
Vancouver
Cullen V, Lindfors M, Ng J, Paetau A, Swinton E, Kolodziej P, et al. Cathepsin D expression level affects alpha-synuclein processing, aggregation, and toxicity in vivo. Molecular Brain. 2009. doi:10.1186/1756-6606-2-5.
BibTeX
@article{valerie2009Cathep, title = {Cathepsin D expression level affects alpha-synuclein processing, aggregation, and toxicity in vivo}, author = {Valerie Cullen and Maria Lindfors and Juliana Ng and Anders Paetau and Erika Swinton and Piotr Kolodziej and Heather Boston and Paul Säftig and John Woulfe and Mel Β. Feany and Liisa Myllykangas and Michael G. Schlossmacher and Jaana Tyynelä}, journal = {Molecular Brain}, year = {2009}, doi = {10.1186/1756-6606-2-5}, }

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