Abstract

α-synuclein (αSyn) is a protein known to form intracellular aggregates during the manifestation of Parkinson’s disease. Previously, it was shown that αSyn aggregation was strongly suppressed in the midbrain region of mice that did not possess the gene encoding the lipid transport protein fatty acid binding protein 3 (FABP3). An interaction between these two proteins was detected in vitro, suggesting that FABP3 may play a role in the aggregation and deposition of αSyn in neurons. To characterize the molecular mechanisms that underlie the interactions between FABP3 and αSyn that modulate the cellular accumulation of the latter, in this report, we used in vitro fluorescence assays combined with fluorescence microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and quartz crystal microbalance assays to characterize in detail the process and consequences of FABP3–αSyn interaction. We demonstrated that binding of FABP3 to αSyn results in changes in the aggregation mechanism of the latter; specifically, a suppression of fibrillar forms of αSyn and also the production of aggregates with an enhanced cytotoxicity toward mice neuro2A cells. Because this interaction involved the C-terminal sequence region of αSyn, we tested a peptide derived from this region of αSyn (αSynP130-140) as a decoy to prevent the FABP3–αSyn interaction. We observed that the peptide competitively inhibited binding of αSyn to FABP3 in vitro and in cultured cells. We propose that administration of αSynP130-140 might be used to prevent the accumulation of toxic FABP3-αSyn oligomers in cells, thereby preventing the progression of Parkinson’s disease.

Highlights

  • Enriched in positively charged lysine residues [3], a central domain which contains many hydrophobic amino acid residues, and a negatively charged Cterminal domain [96–140] [4]

  • To clarify the relationship between these two proteins, we show in Figure 1 in vitro fibril-forming reactions of αSyn that compare the effects of adding fatty acid binding protein 3 (FABP3) to the experiment

  • It has been inferred that the fatty acid binding protein FABP3 is implicated in this process, through in vivo experiments that demonstrate a specific requirement of FABP3 for the deposition of αSyn fibrils [35, 36]

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Summary

Introduction

Enriched in positively charged lysine residues [3], a central domain (the NAC domain; 66–95) which contains many hydrophobic amino acid residues, and a negatively charged Cterminal domain [96–140] [4].

Results
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