Researchers discover a way to turn Parkinson protein on itself

Researchers have found a way to create a super-inhibitor that effectively stops the development of Parkinsons by using the Parkinson disease itself as an active building block.

Various neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s are closely linked to the aggregation of individual components called monomers of a specific protein that forms long chainlike fibrils, which kills the brain cells and disrupts the brain’s signaling causing the disease symptoms such as tremors and slow movements and cognitive impairment in the case of Parkinson’s.

Now researchers have found a way to use the building blocks of the chains to create a super inhibitor that stops the aggregation process, thereby stopping the further development of disease symptoms in animal and cell models of Parkinson’s. Professor Alexander Büll says

“I am particularly excited about the fact that we seem to have discovered a new mode of inhibition, where the initial inhibitor forms a complex with the target and the complex itself is an even better inhibitor. In this way, we get an extremely efficient interference with the dangerous fibril formation process.”

Elderly couple. Image credit: Bridget Coila

Elderly couple. Image credit: Bridget Coila via Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0

The new discovery of the super inhibitor has its roots in a previous study, where Professor Wolfgang Hoyer from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf showed that a binding protein called AS69 efficiently prevents fibril formation in the test tube, but the mechanism behind this remained a mystery.

In the current study recently published in the journal eLife, Professor Alexander Büll and his collaborators from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) and Cambridge University investigated this promising molecule in much more detail.

The researchers found that AS69 captures the monomers and forms complexes with them thereby preventing them from forming the destructive fibrils. Initially, they discovered that this inhibition works efficiently, but requires the same number of AS69 molecules, as the number of molecules that are to be inhibited, and it is therefore not very economical.

When the researchers dived deeper into the mystery of AS69, they found that there is a further property that makes AS69 particularly effective. When AS69 binds to the monomer they transform into a super inhibitor that inhibits the fibril formation much more efficiently than AS69 does on its own.

The researchers have examined the effect of AS69 not only in test tubes but also in cell culture and in animal models. Diseased fruit flies (Drosophila) treated with AS69 displayed notably improved motor skills in a climbing assay. However, Professor Hoyer is still cautious about potential therapeutic use:

“The positive results in living creatures give us hope that we have possibly found a path to an active ingredient through AS69 and other similar molecules. However, it will still be a long time before this could potentially be used for humans.”

Source: DTU