Abstract

alpha-Synuclein, the main component of proteinaceous inclusions in synucleinopathies, is centrally involved in aggregation processes preceding Lewy body formation. Here we describe a new alpha-synuclein gene poly-T polymorphism that is situated upstream to exon 3 and consists of three different alleles. A correlation between poly-T length and expression of alpha-synuclein 126 mRNA, an isoform lacking exon 3, was detected in the human cerebral cortex. Specifically, when compared with the most frequent 7T/7T genotype, the shortest poly-T stretch (5T) was associated with the lowest alpha-synuclein 126 expression levels, whereas the longest poly-T stretch (12T) was accompanied by the highest alpha-synuclein 126 expression levels. Thus, three different expression-level-specific genotypes, with 5T+ genotypes as low alpha-synuclein 126 expression genotypes and 12T+ genotypes as high alpha-synuclein 126 expression genotypes, could be established. Poly-T genotype distributions were also analyzed in a healthy control population. Age-dependent variations in this distribution were observed and showed accumulation of low alpha-synuclein 126 expression genotypes at ages under 60 years and high alpha-synuclein 126 expression genotypes at ages over 80 years. To determine human specificity of the variable poly-T strech, the mouse alpha-synuclein gene sequence was analyzed. Although alpha-synuclein is very well conserved in vertebrates, the poly-T sequence was found to be absent in mice, and an alpha-synuclein 126 mouse homologue could not be detected. In conclusion, this newly identified poly-T polymorphism is a human-specific sequence; its length influences alpha-synuclein 126 expression levels; and, finally, it seems to exert a specific influence on normal aging.

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