- Modulating the catalytic activity of AMPK has neuroprotective effects against ฮฑ-synuclein toxicity.
Modulating the catalytic activity of AMPK has neuroprotective effects against ฮฑ-synuclein toxicity.
Metabolic perturbations and slower renewal of cellular components associated with aging increase the risk of Parkinson's disease (PD). Declining activity of AMPK, a critical cellular energy sensor, may therefore contribute to neurodegeneration. Here, we overexpress various genetic variants of the catalytic AMPKฮฑ subunit to determine how AMPK activity affects the survival and function of neurons overexpressing human ฮฑ-synuclein in vivo. Both AMPKฮฑ1 and ฮฑ2 subunits have neuroprotective effects against human ฮฑ-synuclein toxicity in nigral dopaminergic neurons. Remarkably, a modified variant of AMPKฮฑ1 (T172Dฮฑ1) with constitutive low activity most effectively prevents the loss of dopamine neurons, as well as the motor impairments caused by ฮฑ-synuclein accumulation. In the striatum, T172Dฮฑ1 decreases the formation of dystrophic axons, which contain aggregated ฮฑ-synuclein. In primary cortical neurons, overexpression of human ฮฑ-synuclein perturbs mitochondrial and lysosomal activities. Co-expressing AMPKฮฑ with ฮฑ-synuclein induces compensatory changes, which limit the accumulation of lysosomal material and increase the mitochondrial mass. Together, these results indicate that modulating AMPK activity can mitigate ฮฑ-synuclein toxicity in nigral dopamine neurons, which may have implications for the development of neuroprotective treatments against PD.