4.6 Article

Fibrillar α-synuclein toxicity depends on functional lysosomes

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 295, Issue 51, Pages 17497-17513

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.013428

Keywords

alpha-synuclein; cell viability; lysosomes; Parkinson' s disease; alpha-synuclein (a-synuclein); lysosome; Parkinson disease; cell death; iron

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  2. Government of Victoria from the Operational Infrastructure Support Grant

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Neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD) can be recapitulated in animals by administration of alpha-synuclein preformed fibrils (PFFs) into the brain. However, the mechanism by which these PFFs induce toxicity is unknown. Iron is implicated in PD pathophysiology, so we investigated whether alpha-synuclein PFFs induce ferroptosis, an iron-dependent cell death pathway. A range of ferroptosis inhibitors were added to a striatal neuron-derived cell line (STHdhQ7/7 cells), a dopaminergic neuron-derived cell line (SN4741 cells), and WT primary cortical neurons, all of which had been intoxicated with alpha-synuclein PFFs. Viability was not recovered by these inhibitors except for liproxstatin-1, a best-in-class ferroptosis inhibitor, when used at high doses. High-dose liproxstatin-1 visibly enlarged the area of a cell that contained acidic vesicles and elevated the expression of several proteins associated with the autophagy-lysosomal pathway similarly to the known lysosomal inhibitors, chloroquine and bafilomycin A1. Consistent with high-dose liproxstatin-1 protecting via a lysosomal mechanism, we further de-monstrated that loss of viability induced by alpha-synuclein PFFs was attenuated by chloroquine and bafilomycin A1 as well as the lysosomal cysteine protease inhibitors, leupeptin, E-64D, and Ca-074-Me, but not other autophagy or lysosomal enzyme inhibitors. We confirmed using immunofluorescence microscopy that heparin prevented uptake of alpha-synuclein PFFs into cells but that chloroquine did not stop alpha-synuclein uptake into lysosomes despite impairing lysosomal function and inhibiting alpha-synuclein toxicity. Together, these data suggested that alpha-synuclein PFFs are toxic in functional lysosomes in vitro. Therapeutic strategies that prevent alpha-synuclein fibril uptake into lysosomes may be of benefit in PD.

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