
Alpha-synuclein (α-syn) encoded by
α-Syn aggregates are detected in different cell types and intracellular locations, depending on the associated disease. For example, in PD and DLB, aggregates called Lewy body (LB) or Lewy neurite (LN) are mainly observed in the cytoplasm of neurons (6); in MSA, glial cytoplasmic inclusions in the oligodendrocyte are predominant, although cytoplasmic inclusions and nuclear inclusions are found in the neurons as well (7). Consequently, α-syn can develop into inclusions in various locations under specific pathological circumstances. In normal physiology, however, α-syn exists in a state of equilibrium between soluble tetramers, unstructured monomers, and membrane-bound multimers (8, 9). Pathological conformations arise from the arrangement of β-sheet structure recruited in the process of forming insoluble α-syn oligomers, also known as protofibrils, which may eventually develop into LB (10-12). Organelles such as mitochondria and endosomes are known to be deeply en-gaged in the LB formation as the LB compartments thereby failing the original functional role inside the cell (13). In addition, oligomers and fibrils are known to have toxic effects on cells and therefore the whole aggregation process might result in dysfunction and degeneration of the neural cells (14-16). Furthermore, pathological propagation of α-syn aggregates to other brain regions occurs through cell-to-cell transmission in a prion-like manner (17, 18), which has been elucidated in the previous research using preformed fibrils (PFFs) generated from recombinant α-syn (19). Together, evidence from various studies suggests that α-syn is responsible for neuronal cell death; in consequent, its accumulation might be the leading force of the synucleinopathy progression (20).
Due to its pathological significance, the risk factors for α-syn aggregation have been a subject of great research interest. One of possible risk factors for the aggregation is the
It has been reported that α-syn is a viable target for a variety of PTMs in various sites; for example, acetylation, glycosylation, glycation, nitration, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, and truncation. In this review, the possible role of PTMs in the α-syn aggregation process, either in developing or restraining the LB formation is investigated (Table 1). Since PTMs modify the translated proteins chemically resulting in alteration of physical or chemical properties of their targets, it is likely that PTMs in α-syn would also change their characteristics, such as structure and the propensity to interact with other organic or inorganic substances (26). The changes in the physiological properties of α-syn might either cause or prevent the accumulation of insoluble α-syn aggregates; therefore, it is expected that examining the PTMs on α-syn will give a revealing insight into the mechanism of the protein aggregation process and better understanding on the pathophysiological features relevant to the synucleinopathies including the LB formation in PD.
Some of the PTMs of α-syn have been reported to show protective effects by interrupting the aggregation of α-syn or decreasing cellular toxicity (Table 1). A comparative analysis with wild-type α-syn and modified α-syn is a popular method for determining the effect of PTMs on α-syn. Acetylation, one of the major PTMs that happens inside the cell, occurs at the very end of the amino-terminal region of α-syn, being a common event that is not limited to pathological conditions (9, 27, 28).
The ubiquitin-proteasomal system (UPS) is one of the main mechanisms mediating the clearance of impaired α-syn (77). As might be expected, ubiquitination of α-syn is prevalently linked to the α-syn aggregation process, therefore, inhibiting aggregates formation. The ubiquitination of α-syn and its regulatory effects on the aggregation process have been studied with various ubiquitin E3 ligases. Co-chaperone carboxyl-terminus of Hsp70-interacting protein (CHIP) not only encourages degradation of α-syn by UPS and autophagy-lysosomal path-ways (78), but cell-based research showed that ubiquitination mediated by CHIP eliminates oligomers (79). Similarly, neural precursor cells expressed developmentally down-regulated protein 4 (NEDD4)-mediated ubiquitination of α-syn exerted neuroprotective roles both
Taken together, the above findings suggest that α-syn can be post-translationally modified by various enzymes or stimuli to reduce its propensity to form pathological aggregates. This implies that a lack of these anti-aggregation related PTMs might enhance the progression of synucleinopathy; this provides a new therapeutic target.
Various studies have shown that α-syn PTMs can enhance the aggregation-related PD pathogenesis; PTMs such as glycation, nitration, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, and truncation, have been reported to have both enhancing and suppressing aspects on the pathological α-syn aggregation (Table 1). Glycation of α-syn has an inhibitory effect against α-syn aggregation (48, 49), but the general consensus suggested by numerous reports is that glycation fosters α-syn aggregation and induces toxicity in the brain; these findings are further supported by the existence of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) identified in PD patients’ brains (45-47, 103). There are a number of studies indicating that the aggregation of α-syn is promoted by nitration in a site-specific manner (53, 55). Nitrated monomeric or dimeric α-syn induces fibrillization by recruiting unmodified α-syn, while nitration-induced oligomeric α-syn blocks the development of pathological inclusion; this suggests that the oligomeric status of nitrated α-syn might be an important feature determining the propensity for accelerating the aggregate-related PD pathogenesis (53). Through comparative studies either expressing or inhibiting the relative kinases or using mutated α-syn in which S129 is replaced with alanine (S129A) to impede phosphorylation, it has been specu-lated that the phosphorylation of α-syn is a factor that possibly induces or enhances the aggregation of α-syn and neurotoxicity (57, 61, 62, 65, 66, 69, 71).
While numerous researchers have reported that ubiquitination inhibits α-syn aggregation and reduces its toxicity by promoting its clearance (78-87), a couple of cell-based studies suggest that α-syn mono- or di-ubiquitinated by seven in absentia homolog (SIAH) ubiquitin E3 ligase is more likely to form inclusion and induce cell death in SH-SY5Y and PC12 cells (105, 106). This inconsistency may result from differences in enzymes that mediate α-syn ubiquitination. It has been demonstrated that SUMOylation can enhance α-syn aggregation-related PD pathogenesis; cell-based studies proposed a strong correlation between SUMOylation and aggregation of α-syn (89, 90, 107, 108). Recent research has reported that in the presence of ginkgolic acid which inhibits SUMOylation, α-syn aggregation is inhibited and pre-formed aggregates are eliminated; this implies that SUMOylation might play an important role in the formation of α-syn inclusion (108). The impact of α-syn truncation is still controversial. Although some studies have demonstrated the inhibitory effect of truncation on α-syn aggregation (75, 97-102), there is evidence from
Taken together, these results suggest that α-syn can be post-translationally modified by various enzymes or stimuli to increase its propensity to form pathological aggregates. This sug-gests that an excess of the aggregation-related PTMs might contribute to the progression of synucleinopathy, thus providing another therapeutic target.
Among the PTMs associated with the formation of pathological α-syn inclusions, the phosphorylation at S129 is widely used as a biomarker for PD because 90% of α-syn incorporated in PD patients’ LBs is S129-phosphorylated-α-syn (pS129-α-syn)-positive, while only 4% of α-syn is phosphorylated at S129 under physiological condition (57, 119). It is, however, premature to conclude that S129-phosphorylation triggers initiation or elongation of the α-syn aggregation. According to a study using PFFs, treating cells with the PFFs of C-terminally truncated α-syn without S129 residue induced the development of pS129 with newly recruited endogenous full-length α-syn; this implied that the S129-phosphorylation might not be the essential inducer to start the aggregation (110, 120). In addition, the PFFs of phosphorylation-incompetent α-synS129A could induce the aggregation even in cells stably expressing α-synS129A; indicating that α-syn aggregate seeding and the subsequent recruitment of endogenous α-syn occur even in the S129-phosphorylation-incapable environment (120). On the other hand, however, various
The findings of experimental research on the effects of some PTMs on α-syn aggregation do not come to an accord as shown in Table 1 in which most of the PTMs are reported to act in both directions, either up-regulating or down-regulating α-syn aggregation. The contradiction may arise from the different features between site-specifically modified α-syn proteins. As it is well described in the glycosylation, glycation, nitration, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, and truncation, the tendency of α-syn toward aggregation and its extent differ depending on the modification sites in α-syn (40, 44-46, 51, 54, 61, 67, 74, 75, 81, 82, 84, 86, 91-93, 98-102, 105, 110, 112, 114, 116-118). While a majority of research on phosphorylation at S129 residue suggests that it encourages α-syn aggregation (57, 61, 65, 66, 69, 71), phosphorylation at other sites such as S87 and Y125 have been reported might to inhibit aggregation (61, 64, 67, 74, 76). In the case of ubiquitination, the anti-aggregation effects may vary depending on the modification sites of α-syn and the length of the ubiquitin chain (80-87, 105). Truncation is generally linked to the acceleration of α-syn fibrillization especially when it happens at the carboxy terminus of α-syn (99-102, 109-118); however, a study showed that the α-syn aggregation is inhibited when the NAC region is truncated (99, 101). Besides modification sites, the difference in α-syn aggregation is also attributed to the enzymes related to PTMs. Generally, more than one enzyme is associated with a PTM, and the effect of PTM on α-syn may vary depending on the enzymes involved. For instance, ubiquitination mediated by SIAH is reported to enhance the propensity of α-syn fibrillization (105, 106), whereas other ubiquitin E3 ligases-mediated ubiquitination, such as CHIP and NEDD4, are linked to aggregation inhibitory effect (78-81). One interesting point is that not only α-syn monomers but also fibrils of α-syn are subject to modification. Notably, the consequences of a PTM on different forms of α-syn may be inconsistent; a couple of studies suggested that truncated α-syn monomers are resistant to ag-gregation while the truncation of α-syn fibril induces further fibrillization (99, 100). Some contradictory research results make it hard to determine the pathological impact of the PTMs on synucleinopathies; for example, one research suggested that the glycation reduces conformational flexibility of α-syn and thereby inhibits further fibrillization (49), however, these findings were inconsistent with results of similar studies (45, 47). In addition, a study showed that when the phosphorylation by GRK2 (Gprk2 in
As described in the case of the phosphorylation at S129, it has been widely demonstrated that certain PTMs of α-syn is involved in the aggregation process and subsequent formation of insoluble inclusions, LBs. However, it is still not clear:
This work was supported by Korea Drug Development Fund funded by Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT), Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Energy, and Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) (HN21C1258, Republic of Korea), by the National Research Foundation of Korea grants funded by MSIT (NRF-2019 M3A9H1103783, NRF-2020R1A2C1009172; Republic of Korea), and by Korean Fund for Regenerative Medicine funded by MSIT and MOHW (2021M3E5E5096744, Republic of Korea). Kyungmi Lee was a trainee of the Medical Scientist Training Program at Hanyang University, College of Medicine. I sincerely apologize to colleagues whose work has not been cited in this review due to space limitations.
The authors have no conflicting interests.
Pathological implications of alpha-synuclein post-translational modifications for the aggregation and toxicity
PTM (site/residue) | Enzyme | Experimental model | Aggre- gation | Cell death | Note | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N-terminal | NatB | Reduce | n.d. | Decreased aggregation rate of N-terminally acetylated α-syn than non-acetylated α-syn. | (28) | |
N-terminal | NatB | Reduce | n.d. | Decreased aggregation of N-terminally acetylated α-syn due to the increased helical folding propensity. | (29) | |
N-terminal | NatB | Reduce | n.d. | Decreased α-syn aggregation rate with N-terminal acetylation. | (30) | |
N-terminal | NatB | Reduce | n.d. | Decreased N-terminally acetylated α-syn aggregation rate than non-acetylated α-syn; the aggregation rate more slows down by Fe3+, but no effect by Cu2+. | (32) | |
N-terminal | NatB | Reduce | n.d. | N-terminally acetylated α-syn is less prone to oligomerize than the non-acetylated α-syn in the presence of DOPAL due to increased binding to vesicles. | (33) | |
N-terminal | NatB | No effect | n.d. | No significant differences in the fibrillization kinetics between N-terminally acetylated α-syn and non-acetylated α-syn. | (27) | |
Thr72 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | (42) | ||
Thr72 | n.d. | Rat cortical neuron, SH-SY5Y, |
Reduce | Decrease | Decreased α-syn aggregation and PFF-induced toxicity by |
(41) |
Thr72, 75, 81, Ser87 | n.d. | Mouse hippocampal neuron, |
Reduce | Decrease | Triply |
(40) |
Thr72, Ser87 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | (44) | ||
n.d. | OGT | Reduce | n.d. | Enzymatic O-GlcNAcylation of α-syn inhibits aggregation | (39) | |
N-terminal, all Lys | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Glycation inhibits α-syn fibril formation |
(48) | |
n.d. | n.d. | SH-SY5Y, HeLa, |
Reduce | No effect | Glycated α-syn inhibits fibrillation of itself or of unmodified α-syn |
(49) |
Lys6, 10, 12, 21, 23, 32, 34, 43, 45 | n.d. | hiPSC, mouse, fly, yeast, LUHMES | Enhance | Increase | Glycation promotes the accumulation of toxic α-syn oligomers and enhances α-syn toxicity in cells and |
(45) |
Lys58, 60, 80, 96, 97, 102 | n.d. | SH-SY5Y, |
Enhance | Increase | Ribosylation, glycation with |
(46) |
n.d. | n.d. | Mouse, N2a, |
Enhance | Increase | DJ-1 activity controls to the accumulation of glycated α-syn. | (47) |
Tyr39, 125 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Semi-synthetic nitrated α-syn(nY39 or nY125) has slower aggregation kinetics than wild-type |
(51) | |
Tyr39, 125, 133, 136 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Tyrosine-nitration blocks α-syn fibril formation |
(54) | |
n.d. | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Nitrated α-syn inhibits fibrillation of itself or of unmodified α-syn |
(56) | |
Tyr39 | n.d. | Enhance | n.d. | Nitrated α-syn monomer or dimer accelerates the rate of fibrillation of unmodified α-syn |
(53) | |
Tyr39 | n.d. | Mouse, SH-SY5Y | Enhance | Increase | Y39-nitration of α-syn may increase neuronal α-syn aggregation and apoptosis induced by METH. | (55) |
Ser87 | n.d. | Rat | Reduce | Decrease | Intranigral injection of rAAV2/6-α-syn(WT or S87A) induces α-syn aggregation and loss of DA neurons in rat, but S87E does not. | (76) |
Ser87 | CK1 | Human brain, rat, mouse, |
Reduce | n.d. | Phosphorylation at S87 increases conformational flexibility of α-syn. | (64) |
Ser87, 129 | CK1, CK2 | Human brain, mouse, SH-SY5Y, |
Reduce | n.d. | Phosphorylation at S87 inhibits α-syn fibril formation |
(67) |
Tyr125 | Shark | Human brain, fly | Reduce | Decrease | Y125-phosphorylation of α-syn is reduced in aged human and fly brains. | (61) |
Tyr125, 133, 136 | SYK | Mouse, SH-N-BE, CHO | Reduce | n.d. | Syk-mediated phosphorylation prevents α-syn multimerization; Y125-α-syn is the major phosphorylation site by Syk. | (74) |
Ser129 | n.d. | Mouse, HEK293T | Reduce | Decrease | Prion-like progression and time to disease onset in S129E-α-syn PFFs-injected mouse are elongated. | (75) |
Ser129 | PLK2 | Rat, HEK293T | Reduce | Decrease | S129-phosphorylation of α-syn is mediated by PLK2, and it enhances α-syn autophagic degradation. | (70) |
Ser129 | GRK2 | Fly | Reduce | Increase | S129A-α-syn suppresses DA neuronal cell death induced by α-syn completely and increases inclusion formation; S129D-α-syn or Gprk2-mediated pS129-α-syn enhances α-syn toxicity. | (60) |
Ser129 | GRK6 | Rat | No effect | Increase | Increased levels of pS129-α-syn enhances A53T α-syn toxicity in the rAAV-based rat model. | (62) |
Tyr39 | c-Abl | Mouse, SH-SY5Y, HEK293T, |
Enhance | Increase | Deletion of |
(104) |
Ser129 | CK2 | Human brain, |
Enhance | n.d. | Phosphorylation of α-syn at S129 promotes fibril formation |
(57) |
Ser129 | DAPK1 | SH-SY5Y, MEF | Enhance | Increase | DAPK1 plays an important role in stimulating toxic α-syn aggregation and neuronal cell death. | (71) |
Ser129 | CK2 | SH-SY5Y | Enhance | n.d. | H2O2 induces S129-phosphorylation of α-syn and the inclusion formation. | (66) |
Ser129 | GRK2 | Fly | Enhance | Increase | Co-expression of Gprk2 with α-syn increases α-syn aggregation; S129A-α-syn reduces α-syn toxicity; S129D-α-syn enhances α-syn toxicity. | (61) |
Ser129 | CK1 | Fly | Enhance | Increase | CK1-mediated S129-phosphorylation of α-syn increases the aggregation. | (65) |
Ser129 | PLKs | Mouse, SH-SY5Y | Enhance | Increase | METH treatment increases PLK2 and pS129-α-syn levels, the aggregation, and apoptosis; BI2536, pan-PLK inhibitor, treatment reduces S129-phosphorylation of α-syn, the aggregation, and apoptosis, induced by METH. | (69) |
N-terminal | UBE2W | Reduce | n.d. | N-terminal ubiquitination and the proteasome may together disturb α-syn aggregate formation. | (85) | |
Lys6 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Ubiquitination at K6 results in prominent inhibition of α-syn fibril formation. | (83) | |
Lys6, 12, 21, 32, 34, 43, 96 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Disulfide-directed ubiquitination at K32C, K34C, K43C or K96C strongly inhibits α-syn aggregation; disulfide-directed ubiquitination at K6C, K12C, or K21C inhibits α-syn aggregation; disulfide-directed ubiquitination at K10C or K23C may not inhibit α-syn aggregation. | (82) | |
Lys6, 23, 96 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Disulfide-directed ubiquitination at K6C, K23C, or K96C inhibits α-syn aggregation; disulfide-directed ubiquitination at K96C may cause an alteration in the structure of α-syn aggregates. | (86) | |
Lys12 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | K12 tetra-ubiquitinated α-syn forms nonfibrillar aggregates but does not form amyloid fibrils; α-syn K12 di/tetra-ubiquitination abolishes PLK3-mediated phosphorylation at S129, but SYK-mediated phosphorylation at Y125 destabilizes K12 tetra-ubiquitinated α-syn. | (87) | |
Lys12, 21, 45, 58, 96 | NEDD4 | Human brain, SH-SY5Y, HEK293, yeast, |
Reduce | Decrease | Nedd4-mediated ubiquitination promotes the destruction of α-syn by the endosomal–lysosomal pathway. | (81) |
Lys45, 58, 60 | SCF | Mouse, SH-SY5Y, HeLa, BV-2, COS7 | Reduce | n.d. | SCF containing FBXL5 prevents LB-like pathology by extracellular α-syn fibrils, from the initiation and spreading in mice. | (84) |
n.d. | CHIP | Human brain, H4 | Reduce | n.d. | Overexpression of CHIP, a component of LBs, inhibits α-syn aggregation and reduces α-syn protein levels. | (78) |
n.d. | CHIP | H4 | Reduce | Decrease | Co-expression of CHIP selectively degrades toxic α-syn oligomers, thereby it selectively reduces α-syn oligomerization and toxicity. | (79) |
n.d. | NEDD4 | Rat, fly | Reduce | Decrease | Overexpressed-Nedd4-mediated degradation reduces the accumulation and aggregation of α-syn in rat SN; overexpression of Nedd4 decreases the α-syn-induced dopaminergic cell loss in a rat model. | (80) |
Lys10, 12, 21, 23, 34, 43, 96 | SIAH1/2 | SH-SY5Y, |
Enhance | Increase | Monoubiquitylation may trigger α-syn aggregation and LB formation. | (105) |
n.d. | SIAH1 | HeLa, PC12, |
Enhance | Increase | Siah1-mediated ubiquitination promotes α-syn aggregation and enhances its toxicity. | (106) |
Lys96,102 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | SUMOylation at K102 more inhibits the aggregation of α-syn than K96 SUMOylation; SUMO1 modification more inhibits the aggregation of α-syn than SUMO3. | (91) | |
Lys96,102 | n.d. | Yeast | Reduce | Decrease | Impaired SUMOylation of α-syn aggravates cytotoxicity and increase the formation of inclusions. | (92) |
Lys96,102 | n.d. | Rat, HEK293T, |
Reduce | Decrease | SUMOylation of α-syn impaired by K96/102R mutation increases propensity for both aggregation and cytotoxicity in rat SN DA neurons. | (93) |
n.d. | PIAS2 | Human brain, SH-SY5Y, HEK293 | Enhance | n.d. | PIAS2-mediated SUMOylation leads to α-syn accumulation by reducing its degradation via UPS; PIAS2 expression along with SUMOylated α-syn in PD brains. | (89) |
n.d. | CBX4 | HEK293, COS7 | Enhance | Decrease | Increased α-syn aggregation and decreased staurosporine-induced cell death by CBX4-mediated SUMOylation. | (107) |
n.d. | n.d. | Rat cortical neuron, SH-SY5Y | Enhance | n.d. | SUMOylation inhibitor, ginkgolic acid, promotes autophagy-dependent clearance of α-syn aggregates. | (108) |
1-57, 1-73, 1-75, 1-83 | CAPN1 | Reduce | n.d. | CAPN1-cleaved soluble α-syn fragments prevent fibrillization of full-length α-syn. | (99) | |
1-108, 1-124 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | Truncation of the C-terminal 16 amino acid residues of α-syn results in an approximately 8-fold reduction of t1/2 in aggregation kinetics. | (98) | |
1-115, 1-119, 1-122, 1-125, 1-129 | n.d. | Mouse, HEK29T, |
Reduce | Decrease | Prion-like progression and time to disease onset in C-terminally truncated α-syn PFFs-injected mouse are elongated. | (75) |
1-120 | n.d. | Mouse, SH-SY5Y | Reduce | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn fibrils induce sparse α-syn pathologies in mouse. | (102) |
11-140, 31-140 | n.d. | Reduce | n.d. | N-terminally truncated α-syn slows down the aggregation |
(102) | |
1-57 | CAPN1 | Mouse, |
*Reduce | n.d. | The major cleavage site of soluble α-syn by CAPN1 is between E57-K58. | (100) |
1-80 | KLK6 | *Reduce | n.d. | The cleavage of α-syn between K80-T81 (within the NAC region) may impede α-syn aggregation. | (101) | |
1-108 | n.d. | *Reduce | n.d. | Strongly twisted β-sheets in α-syn(1-108) fibrils resist incorporation of full-length α-syn monomers. | (97) | |
1-87, 1-120 | n.d. | Enhance | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn is most rapidly assembled. | (114) | |
1-102, 1-110 | n.d. | Enhance | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn aggregates more rapidly than full-length protein. | (116) | |
1-103 | AEP | Rat ventral midbrain neuron, mouse | Enhance | Increase | AEP-cleaved α-syn(1-103) enhances the aggregation and the neurotoxicity. | (111) |
1-103, 1-122 | n.d. | Enhance | n.d. | Increased fibril helix twists upon removal of C-terminal residues. | (117) | |
1-114, 1-122 | CAPN1 | Enhance | n.d. | CAPN1-cleaved fibrillar α-syn promotes further co-assembly with full-length α-syn. | (99) | |
1-120 | n.d. | Enhance | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn quickens up the aggregation |
(102) | |
1-120 | n.d. | Fly | Enhance | Increase | α-Syn(1-120) increases the aggregation and enhances the neurotoxicity |
(109) |
1-120 | n.d. | Mouse | Enhance | *Increase | Rat TH-specific expression of α-syn(1-120) leads to the formation of pathological inclusions in SN and OB and to a reduction in striatal dopamine levels. | (115) |
1-120, 1-123 | n.d. | Mouse, SH-SY5Y, HEK29T, N2a, Ltk-, COS-1 | Enhance | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn enhances the aggregation of full-length α-syn. | (110) |
1-120, 1-123 | AEP | Mouse brain, N27 | Enhance | n.d. | C-terminal cleavage of α-syn is directly induced by lysosomal activity. | (112) |
1-122 | CAPN1 | Human brain lysate, SH-SY5Y | Enhance | n.d. | Cleavage of α-syn by CAPN1 enhances self-aggregation and induces β-sheet structure. | (113) |
11-140, 31-140 | n.d. | Mouse, SH-SY5Y | Enhance | n.d. | N-terminally truncated α-syn fibrils induce abundant α-syn pathologies in mouse. | (102) |
1-97 | KLK6 | *Enhance | n.d. | The cleavage of α-syn between K97-D98 may enhance the aggregation. | (101) | |
1-103, 1-119 | n.d. | *Enhance | n.d. | C-terminally truncated α-syn promotes the aggregation at neutral pH. | (118) | |
1-122 | CAPN1 | Mouse, |
*Enhance | n.d. | Fibrillized α-syn is cleaved predominantly after E114 and N122 by CAPN1. | (100) |
*Speculation without experimental evidence. AGEs, advanced glycation end-products. DA neuron, dopaminergic neuron. DOPAL, 3,4-dihydroxy-phenylacetaldehyde. hiPSC, human induced pluripotent stem cell. LB, Lewy body. MATH, methamphetamine. n.d., not determined. NAC, non-amyloid component. O-GlcNAcylation, O-linked β-N-acetylglucosaminylation. OB, olfactory bulb. PD, Parkinson’s disease. PFF, pre-formed fibril. SN, substantia nigra. SUMO, small ubiquitin-like modifier. UPS, ubiquitin proteasome system.
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