α-Synuclein phosphorylation at serine 129 occurs after initial protein deposition and inhibits seeded fibril formation and toxicity

  • Simona S. Ghanem
  • , Nour K. Majbour
  • , Nishant N. Vaikath
  • , Mustafa T. Ardah
  • , Daniel Erskine
  • , Nanna Møller Jensen
  • , Muneera Fayyad
  • , Indulekha P. Sudhakaran
  • , Eftychia Vasili
  • , Katerina Melachroinou
  • , Ilham Y. Abdi
  • , Ilaria Poggiolini
  • , Patricia Santos
  • , Anton Dorn
  • , Paolo Carloni
  • , Kostas Vekrellis
  • , Johannes Attems
  • , Ian McKeith
  • , Tiago F. Outeiro
  • , Poul Henning Jensen
  • Omar M.A. El-Agnaf*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

117 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

α-Synuclein (α-syn) phosphorylation at serine 129 (pS129–α-syn) is substantially increased in Lewy body disease, such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). However, the pathogenic relevance of pS129–α-syn remains controversial, so we sought to identify when pS129 modification occurs during α-syn aggregation and its role in initiation, progression and cellular toxicity of disease. Using diverse aggregation assays, including real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) on brain homogenates from PD and DLB cases, we demonstrated that pS129–α-syn inhibits α-syn fibril formation and seeded aggregation. We also identified lower seeding propensity of pS129–α-syn in cultured cells and correspondingly attenuated cellular toxicity. To build upon these findings, we developed a monoclonal antibody (4B1) specifically recognizing nonphosphorylated S129–α-syn (WT–α-syn) and noted that S129 residue is more efficiently phosphorylated when the protein is aggregated. Using this antibody, we characterized the time-course of α-syn phosphorylation in organotypic mouse hippocampal cultures and mice injected with α-syn preformed fibrils, and we observed aggregation of nonphosphorylated α-syn followed by later pS129–α-syn. Furthermore, in postmortem brain tissue from PD and DLB patients, we observed an inverse relationship between relative abundance of nonphosphorylated α-syn and disease duration. These findings suggest that pS129–α-syn occurs subsequent to initial protein aggregation and apparently inhibits further aggregation. This could possibly imply a potential protective role for pS129–α-syn, which has major implications for understanding the pathobiology of Lewy body disease and the continued use of reduced pS129–α-syn as a measure of efficacy in clinical trials.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2109617119
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume119
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Apr 2022

Keywords

  • Parkinson’s disease
  • phosphorylation
  • α-synuclein

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