Abstract

In Parkinson's disease (PD), neuronal cells undergo mitotic catastrophe and endoreduplication prior to cell death; however, the regulatory mechanisms remain to be defined. In this study, we investigated cell cycle regulation of DNA polymerase β (poly β) in rotenone-based dopaminergic cellular and animal models. Incubation with a low concentration (0.25 µM) of rotenone for 1.5 to 7 days resulted in a flattened cell body and decreased DNA replication during S phase, whereas a high concentration (2 µM) of rotenone exposure resulted in enlarged, multi-nucleated cells and converted the mitotic cycle into endoreduplication. Consistently, DNA poly β, which is mainly involved in DNA repair synthesis, was upregulated to a high level following exposure to 2 µM rotenone. The abrogation of DNA poly β by siRNA transfection or dideoxycytidine (DDC) treatment attenuated the rotenone-induced endoreduplication. The cell cycle was reactivated in cyclin D-expressing dopaminergic neurons from the substantia nigra (SN) of rats following stereotactic (ST) infusion of rotenone. Increased DNA poly β expression was observed in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and the substantia nigra pars reticulate (SNr) of rotenone-treated rats. Collectively, in the in vitro model of rotenone-induced mitotic catastrophe, the overexpression of DNA poly β promotes endoreduplication; in the in vivo model, the upregulation of DNA poly β and cell cycle reentry were also observed in the adult rat substantia nigra. Therefore, the cell cycle regulation of DNA poly β may be involved in the pathological processes of PD, which results in the induction of endoreduplication.

Highlights

  • Neuronal cells are maintained in the G2 phase for a long time, and endoreduplication has been verified as a pathological event in Parkinson’s disease (PD) that occurs in cells prior to apoptosis [1]

  • We demonstrated that the overexpression of DNA poly b was involved in the rotenone-mediated pathology of cellular and animal models of PD

  • Selective injury to dopaminergic neurons by rotenone resulted in the upregulation of DNA poly b as the neuronal cell cycle was reactivated

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Summary

Introduction

Neuronal cells are maintained in the G2 phase for a long time, and endoreduplication has been verified as a pathological event in Parkinson’s disease (PD) that occurs in cells prior to apoptosis [1]. DNA polymerase b (poly b), which is primarily involved in DNA repair, is involved in DNA endoreduplication during normal development [6]. In neurodegenerative diseases, such as AD, the action of DNA poly b but not DNA a is loaded into DNA replication forks and results in aberrant DNA replication; erratic expression of DNA b occurs early in neuronal degeneration [7]; DNA poly b and the base excision repair pathway are required to repair the damage caused by oxidative stress [8]. The connection between DNA poly b and endoreduplication in the neuronal cell cycle is unknown

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