Abstract

BackgroundParkinson disease (PD) is a debilitating movement disorder that afflicts 1–2% of the population over 50 years of age. The common hallmark for both sporadic and familial forms of PD is mitochondrial dysfunction. Mammals have at least twenty proapoptotic and antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family members, in contrast, only two Bcl-2 family genes have been identified in Drosophila melanogaster, the proapoptotic mitochondrial localized Debcl and the antiapoptotic Buffy. The expression of the human transgene α-synuclein, a gene that is strongly associated with inherited forms of PD, in dopaminergic neurons (DA) of Drosophila, results in loss of neurons and locomotor dysfunction to model PD in flies. The altered expression of Debcl in the DA neurons and neuron-rich eye and along with the expression of α-synuclein offers an opportunity to highlight the role of Debcl in mitochondrial-dependent neuronal degeneration and death.ResultsThe directed overexpression of Debcl using the Ddc-Gal4 transgene in the DA of Drosophila resulted in flies with severely decreased survival and a premature age-dependent loss in climbing ability. The inhibition of Debcl resulted in enhanced survival and improved climbing ability whereas the overexpression of Debcl in the α-synuclein-induced Drosophila model of PD resulted in more severe phenotypes. In addition, the co-expression of Debcl along with Buffy partially counteracts the Debcl-induced phenotypes, to improve the lifespan and the associated loss of locomotor ability observed. In complementary experiments, the overexpression of Debcl along with the expression of α-synuclein in the eye, enhanced the eye ablation that results from the overexpression of Debcl. The co-expression of Buffy along with Debcl overexpression results in the rescue of the moderate developmental eye defects. The co-expression of Buffy along with inhibition of Debcl partially restores the eye to a roughened eye phenotype.DiscussionThe overexpression of Debcl in DA neurons produces flies with shortened lifespan and impaired locomotor ability, phenotypes that are strongly associated with models of PD in Drosophila. The co-expression of Debcl along with α-synuclein enhanced the PD-like phenotypes. The co-expression of Debcl along with Buffy suppresses these phenotypes. Complementary experiments in the Drosophila eye show similar trends during development. Taken all together these results suggest a role for Debcl in neurodegenerative disorders.

Highlights

  • Parkinson disease (PD) is a human movement disorder that is strongly associated with the selective and profound degeneration and loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons to result in a set of marked clinical features (Forno, 1996)

  • The first Drosophila model of PD utilized a human a-synuclein transgene to induce the PD-like symptoms (Feany & Bender, 2000). This model system is very successful and widely applied, as it displays the age-dependent loss of locomotor function, the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons (DA) neurons and Lewy Bodies (LB)-like inclusions, features that are present in human PD (Auluck et al, 2002; Botella et al, 2009; Buttner et al, 2014; Feany & Bender, 2000; Kong et al, 2015; Staveley, 2014; Webb et al, 2003; Zhu et al, 2016)

  • Debcl is similar to the human proapoptotic Bcl-2 ovarian killer (Bok) Bioinformatic analysis of the protein sequences encoded by the Debcl and Bok genes reveal 37% identity and 55% similarity

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson disease (PD) is a human movement disorder that is strongly associated with the selective and profound degeneration and loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons to result in a set of marked clinical features (Forno, 1996). The expression of the human transgene a-synuclein, a gene that is strongly associated with inherited forms of PD, in dopaminergic neurons (DA) of Drosophila, results in loss of neurons and locomotor dysfunction to model PD in flies. The inhibition of Debcl resulted in enhanced survival and improved climbing ability whereas the overexpression of Debcl in the a-synuclein-induced Drosophila model of PD resulted in more severe phenotypes. The co-expression of Debcl along with Buffy partially counteracts the Debcl-induced phenotypes, to improve the lifespan and the associated loss of locomotor ability observed. Discussion: The overexpression of Debcl in DA neurons produces flies with shortened lifespan and impaired locomotor ability, phenotypes that are strongly associated with models of PD in Drosophila. Taken all together these results suggest a role for Debcl in neurodegenerative disorders

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