Yeast Reveals New Drug Target Forparkinson S
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Yeast Reveals New Drug Target for Parkinson’s Posted on November 5, 2013 by Dr. Francis Collins
Caption: Left, yeast sick with too much α -synuclein, a protein that is implicated in Parkinson’s disease. Right, the same yeast cells after a dose of NAB, which seems to reverse the toxic effects of α -synuclein. Credit: Daniel Tardiff, Whitehead Institute Many progressive neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, and Parkinson’s disease, are characterized by abnormal clumps of proteins that clog up the cell and disrupt normal cellular functions. But it’s difficult to study these complex disease processes directly in the brain—so NIH-funded researchers, led by a team at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA, have turned to yeast for help. Now, it may sound odd to study a brain disease in yeast, a microorganism long used in baking and brewing. After all, the brain is made up of billions of cells of many different types, while yeast grows as a single cell. But because the processes of protein production are generally conserved from yeast to humans, we can use this infinitely simpler organism to figure out what the proteins clumps are doing and test various drug candidates to halt the damage. The researchers focused on Parkinson’s disease, in which elevated levels or mutated forms of a protein called alpha synuclein (a-syn) wreak havoc on the cell, disrupting everything from protein trafficking to the activity of the cell’s power generators, called mitochondria. Adding to the damage, there can be a rise in the concentration of reactive compounds that damage DNA and other molecules inside the cell. The a-syn protein that poisons neurons in Parkinson’s disease turns out also to be toxic for yeast: engineering yeast to produce too much a-syn makes them sick and slow growing. Taking advantage of this system, the researchers tested about 190,000 compounds to see whether any of those would reverse the toxic effects and allow the cells to grow rapidly again. If a compound could reverse the damage from a-syn in yeast, it might reveal clues about how to do the same thing in humans. Identifying such compounds is critical, because there is currently no cure for Parkinson’s disease—which affects between 750,000 and 1 million Americans. Beyond the implications for Parkinson’s disease, this represents a dramatically new approach to drug discovery. Traditionally, pharmaceutical companies have taken a problematic target—like a-syn or another protein known to be involved in the disease—put it in a test tube, then blasted it with thousands of drug candidates, to see which one could block the clumping or toxic activity. But that doesn’t reveal if and how the drug will work in a whole, living organism. Here’s where the yeast come in: they’re essentially living test tubes. They allow the researchers to see a drug’s impact on an entire organism that’s been genetically modified to mimic the biochemical mechanism underlying a specific disease. It’s an innovative strategy for drug hunting that will likely be extended to other conditions, particularly neurological diseases. In the latest study, a compound called N-aryl benzimidazole (NAB) corrected the protein-trafficking problems and blocked production of destructive reactive compounds in yeast with too much a-syn. And, very importantly, it prevented a-syn from forming aggregates [1]. The researchers went on to test the compound in an animal model, a worm called Caendorhabditis elegans, and also in rat neurons grown in a laboratory dish. Both models were engineered to mimic the physiology of neurons from Parkinson’s patients. As in yeast, NAB reversed the toxicity caused by a-syn. Then, collaborating with another team at the Whitehead, the researchers tested NAB in cortical neurons that had been derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (which are created from ordinary skin cells) of two Parkinson’s patients who had different genetic mutations—both causing errors in protein trafficking and high levels of reactive compounds. Just as in yeast, C. elegans, and the in vitro rat neurons, NAB largely corrected the defects [2]. So, how does too much a-syn cause all of these problems? With some rather elaborate genetics, the researchers discovered that NAB activates a protein called Rsp5. Rsp5 labels proteins with a particular type of ubiquitin tag (think zip code) that controls the trafficking (think parcel delivery) of certain proteins inside the cell. Too much, or mutant, a-syn actually inhibits these same trafficking pathways. This means that NAB reverses the cellular problems that a-syn triggers. That’s particularly exciting, as NAB is actually modifying a central component of the disease. If this compound, or one like it, were eventually developed into a drug, it would not simply treat the symptoms, but rather it might actually stop the damage to neurons. That’s ultimately what we hope to do for all neurodegenerative diseases. References: [1] Yeast Reveal a “Druggable” Rsp5/Nedd4 Network that Ameliorates α -Synuclein Toxicity in Neurons. Tardiff DF, Jui NT, Khurana V, Tambe MA, Thompson ML, Chung CY, Kamadurai HB, Kim HT, Lancaster AK, Caldwell KA, Caldwell GA, Rochet JC, Buchwald SL, Lindquist S. Science. 2013 Oct 24. [Epub ahead of print] [2] Identification and Rescue of α -Synuclein Toxicity in Parkinson Patient-Derived Neurons. Chung CY, Khurana V, Auluck PK, Tardiff DF, Mazzulli JR, Soldner F, Baru V, Lou Y, Freyzon Y, Cho S, Mungenast AE, Muffat J, Mitalipova M, Pluth MD, Jui NT, Schüle B, Lippard SJ, Tsai LH, Krainc D, Buchwald SL, Jaenisch R, Lindquist S. Science. 2013 Oct 24 Links: Lindquist Laboratory Jaenisch Laboratory NINDS Parkinson’s Disease Information Page NIH Patient Recruitment for Parkinson’s Disease Clinical Trials New Insight into Parkinson’s Disease (Posted on March 12, 2013) NIH support: National Institute of General Medical Sciences; National Cancer Institute; National Institute on Aging Email More This entry was posted in Science and tagged a-syn, alpha-synuclein, Alzheimer’s disease, brain, drug candidates, genetic mutations, Huntington's disease, induced Pluripotent Stem cells, N-aryl benzimidazole, NAB, National Institutes of Health, neurological diseases, neurons, NIH, Parkinson's disease, protein, protein clumping, Rsp5, ubiquitin tag, yeast. Bookmark the permalink.