Damage
from oxygen may be one cause of Parkinson’s disease
Newswise — Research by
neuroscientists at the University of Virginia Health System shows
that oxygen free radicals are damaging proteins in mitochondria, the
tiny cellular ‘batteries’ of brain cells. This damage may be one
main cause of Parkinson’s Disease (PD), the chronic movement
disorder that affects at least one million Americans. UVa scientists
believe the damage is taking place in a large protein structure
called complex I, the first stop in the electron transport chain,
which produces an electrical charge inside mitochondria.
Mitochondria then use this electrical charge to make energy.
Using the brain cells from
deceased Parkinson’s patients who donated to the UVa brain bank, Dr.
Jim Bennett, a UVa neurologist, and colleagues, isolated complex I
from the mitochondria of ten Parkinson’s brains and compared them to
the complex I proteins from twelve normal brains. They discovered
that the complex I assembly in Parkinson’s had 50 percent more
damage from oxygen. The complex I in Parkinson’s brains also had
evidence of not being properly assembled and had reduced electron
flow, Bennett said.
“This part of the protein
complex is being damaged by oxygen free radicals more in a brain
with Parkinson’s than it is in someone of same age who does not have
PD,” Bennett said. His research is published in the May 10th edition
of the Journal of Neuroscience found on the web at
http://www.jneurosci.org.
Oxygen free radicals are oxygen
molecules that carry an extra electron. They are destructive
because, in excessive amounts, they chemically attack the components
of the cell, including proteins, DNA and lipids in cell membranes.
One of the major problems of normal aging is an increased level of
these free radical damaged proteins, along with damaged DNA and
lipids.
Bennett believes that Parkinson’s
patients may benefit one day from drugs that can slow the damage
from free radicals. “If we could soak up the free radicals in
mitochondria, then complex I could repair itself,” Bennett said. “If
this damage is caught in people early on, we might interrupt the
progression of Parkinson’s disease. Such treatment is hypothetical
at this point, but it is rational.”
Right now, Bennett and his
colleagues don’t know why complex I was damaged in the Parkinson’s
patients. “It could be that something has gone terribly wrong with
the mitrochondrial genome passed down by a person’s mother that
codes for several proteins in complex I,” Bennett said. “Something
could be wrong in the coding for genes that help complex I assemble.
Or there could be environmental toxins. Our research is a first real
step in understanding at a detailed biochemical level what the
challenge is.”
Bennett said he now plans to model
the observation by extracting mitochondrial DNA from the cells of
donated PD brains, put the DNA into a cell and express it to see if
the phenomenon can be reproduced.
As part of a U.S. government
effort to find the cause and a cure for PD, UVa is one of only 12
medical centers to be designated a Morris K. Udall Parkinson’s
Disease Center of Excellence by the National Institutes of Health.
The NIH recently renewed a $1.3 million research grant to Bennett
and his Udall team of investigators. Bennett’s team is one of the
few Udall Centers that does Parkinson’s research on human brain
cells.
Co-authors with Bennett on the
paper in the Journal of Neuroscience are Paula M. Keeney, B.S., of
the Center for the Study of Neurodegenerative Diseases at UVa, and
Jing Xie, Ph.D., and Roderick Capaldi, Ph.D., both of the Institute
of Molecular Biology at the University of Oregon.