Abstract

Heterogeneous aggregates of the human protein α-synuclein (αSyn) are abundantly found in Lewy body inclusions of Parkinson’s disease patients. While structural information on classical αSyn amyloid fibrils is available, little is known about the conformational properties of disease-relevant, non-canonical aggregates. Here, we analyze the structural and dynamic properties of megadalton-sized dityrosine adducts of αSyn that form in the presence of reactive oxygen species and cytochrome c, a proapoptotic peroxidase that is released from mitochondria during sustained oxidative stress. In contrast to canonical cross-β amyloids, these aggregates retain high degrees of internal dynamics, which enables their characterization by solution-state NMR spectroscopy. We find that intermolecular dityrosine crosslinks restrict αSyn motions only locally whereas large segments of concatenated molecules remain flexible and disordered. Indistinguishable aggregates form in crowded in vitro solutions and in complex environments of mammalian cell lysates, where relative amounts of free reactive oxygen species, rather than cytochrome c, are rate limiting. We further establish that dityrosine adducts inhibit classical amyloid formation by maintaining αSyn in its monomeric form and that they are non-cytotoxic despite retaining basic membrane-binding properties. Our results suggest that oxidative αSyn aggregation scavenges cytochrome c’s activity into the formation of amorphous, high molecular-weight structures that may contribute to the structural diversity of Lewy body deposits.

Highlights

  • Lewy body (LB) aggregates of the pre-synaptic protein aSyn are pathological hallmarks of Parkinson’s disease[1,2] and related synucleinopathies.[3]

  • We further demonstrate that cyt c-mediated aSyn aggregates form in macromolecularly crowded, cellular environments, where they exhibit structural and dynamic characteristics that are indistinguishable from aggregates reconstituted with purified components in vitro

  • We did not observe protein precipitation in any of these reaction mixtures, soluble high molecular weight aggregates (HMWAs) were retained in the loading slots and stack portions of SDS gels

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Summary

Introduction

Lewy body (LB) aggregates of the pre-synaptic protein aSyn are pathological hallmarks of Parkinson’s disease[1,2] and related synucleinopathies.[3]. To independently verify the general nature of these dityrosine aggregate characteristics, we resorted to photoinduced crosslinking of unmodified proteins (PICUP) and reacted N-terminally acetylated aSyn with ammoniumpersulfate (APS) and Ruthenium (Ru3+) under light as reported previously.[28] PICUP HMWAs displayed similar SDS-PAGE migration properties as cyt c/H2O2-mediated aggregates in that aSyn was quantitatively converted into high molecular weight species retained in loading slots and stacking gels (Figure 2(d)).

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