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Submitted on May 17, 2006
Accepted on July 18, 2006

Identification of novel proteins interacting with both a-synuclein and DJ-1

Jinghua Jin, G. Jane Li, Jeanne Davis, David Zhu, Yan Wang, Catherine Pan, and Jing Zhang

Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98104

Corresponding Author: zhangj{at}u.washington.edu

The molecular mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration in Parkinson disease (PD) remain elusive, although many lines of evidence have indicated that a-synuclein and DJ-1, two critical proteins in PD pathogenesis, interact with each other functionally. The investigation on whether a-synuclein directly interacts with DJ-1 has been controversial. In the current study, we analyzed proteins associated with a-synuclein and/or DJ-1 with a robust proteomic technique called SILAC (stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture) in dopaminergic MES cells exposed to rotenone versus controls. We identified 587 and 558 proteins in the a-synuclein and DJ-1 associated protein complexes, respectively. Among a-synuclein-associated proteins, 141 proteins displayed significant changes in relative abundance (increase or decrease) after rotenone treatment; among DJ-1-associated proteins, 119 proteins displayed significant changes in the relative abundance after rotenone treatment. Although no direct interaction was observed between a-synuclein and DJ-1, whether analyzed by affinity purification followed by mass spectrometry or subsequent direct co-immunoprecipitation (IP), 293 proteins were seen in association with both a-synuclein and DJ-1. Of those, 114 proteins displayed significant changes in the relative abundance in the complexes associated with a-synuclein, DJ-1, or both after rotenone treatment. A subset of these proteins (mortalin, nucleolin, grp94, calnexin and clathrin) was further validated for their direct interaction with both a-synuclein and DJ-1 using confocal microscopy and/or IP. Thus, we have not only confirmed that there was no direct interaction between a-synuclein and DJ-1, but also, for the first time, to report these five novel proteins directly interacting with both a-synuclein and DJ-1. Further characterization of these docking proteins will likely shed more light on the mechanisms by which DJ-1 modulates the function of a-synuclein, and vice versa, in the setting of PD.


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N. Zhong and J. Xu
Synergistic activation of the human MnSOD promoter by DJ-1 and PGC-1{alpha}: regulation by SUMOylation and oxidation
Hum. Mol. Genet., November 1, 2008; 17(21): 3357 - 3367.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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