PARIS is always a good idea

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Audrey Hepburn was taking about the city when she uttered the words that title this post, but today we will be talking about the protein that bears the same name: PARIS.

Last week new research was published which demonstrated that in the absence of Parkin and Pink1 protein, the protein PARIS builds up and becomes toxic for cells.

Today’s post will review that research and we’ll discuss what it all means for Parkinson’s disease.


paris

No label required. A magnificent city. Source: HathawaysofHaworth

Today’s post has nothing to do with the city of Paris, but it is always nice to have photos of this European capital gracing the page.

We have recently discussed the Parkinson’s associated proteins Pink1 and Parkin (click here for that post). Today we will be revisiting these proteins as we discuss another protein that they interact with: PARIS (specifically PARIS1).

What is PARIS?

PARIS (aka TBC1D2 or TBC1 Domain Family Member 2) is a GTPase-activating protein.

What does that mean?

Getting a signal from outside of a cell into the interior is a complicated affair. There are numerous ways to do it, but one of the most common involves ‘G-proteins‘. These are involved with transmitting a signal from the outside of a cell into the interior, and when inside the cell G-proteins act as molecular switches.

G-proteins are located inside the cell membrane and are activated by G-protein-coupled receptors. When a signaling molecule binds to the G-protein-coupled receptor on the outside of the cell membrane, the portion of the receptor inside the cell activates the G-protein which then starts of a chain of events resulting in the signal being passed on.

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Source: Bio1151

The role of GTPase-Activating Proteins in this process is to turn the G protein’s activity off. In step 4 of the image above, a GTPase-Activating Protein (which is not shown) binds to the G-protein and terminate the activity of the signalling event – returning it to an inactive state.

Thus, GTPase-Activating Proteins – like PARIS – are important regulators of signalling inside the cell.

What do we know about PARIS1 in Parkinson’s disease?

So a few years ago, a group of researchers led by Prof Ted Dawson at John Hopkins School of Medicine published this study:

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Title: PARIS (ZNF746) repression of PGC-1α contributes to neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease.
Authors: Shin JH, Ko HS, Kang H, Lee Y, Lee YI, Pletinkova O, Troconso JC, Dawson VL, Dawson TM.
Journal: Cell. 2011 Mar 4;144(5):689-702.
PMID: 21376232        (This article is OPEN ACCESS if you would like to read it)

In this study, the researchers noticed that the protein PARIS was accumulating in cells that did not have the Parkinson’s associated protein, Parkin. In those cells, the Parkin gene was mutated so that the Parkin protein was not produced properly. The researchers discovered that Parkin was important for labelling old PARIS protein for disposal. Thus in the absence of Parkin, PARIS protein would not be disposed of and simply piled up.

This build up of PARIS resulted in the loss of dopamine neurons in mice that did not produce Parkin. When the researchers re-introduced normal Parkin protein, the researchers were able to rescue the cell loss. Interestingly, the researchers also found that over production of PARIS in normal mice resulted in cell loss which could be rescued by a similar over production of Parkin.

When they looked in postmortem human brains, the researchers found that levels of PARIS protein were more than two times higher in regions affected by Parkinson’s disease (the striatum and the substantia nigra) of people with sporadic Parkinson’s disease when compared to healthy controls. Interestingly, this increase was only seen with PARIS protein, and not PARIS RNA (where the scientists saw no different with control samples), suggesting a build up of PARIS protein in the Parkinsonian brain.

The investigators concluded that this meant PARIS was could be playing a role in the cell loss associated with Parkinson’s disease.

They followed up this research a few years later with this publication:

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Title: Parkin loss leads to PARIS-dependent declines in mitochondrial mass and respiration.
Authors: Stevens DA, Lee Y, Kang HC, Lee BD, Lee YI, Bower A, Jiang H, Kang SU, Andrabi SA, Dawson VL, Shin JH, Dawson TM.
Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Sep 15;112(37):11696-701.
PMID: 26324925     (This article is OPEN ACCESS if you would like to read it)

In this study, the same researchers found that when they remove the Parkin protein from the brains of adult mice there would be a decrease in the size and number of mitochondria. We have previous discussed mitochondria – the power stations of the cell – and their loss is bad news for a cell (click here to read more on mitochondria).

The researchers next demonstrated that this loss of mitochondria could reversed by removing PARIS protein from the Parkin mutant mice, and this prevented the loss of dopamine neurons. They also showed that the loss of mitochondria (and loss of dopamine neurons) could be caused by over production of PARIS in normal mice.

These results pointed towards an important role for both Parkin and PARIS in the maintenance of healthy mitochondria.

So what new research has been published about PARIS1?

This study was published last week:

dawson

Title: PINK1 Primes Parkin-Mediated Ubiquitination of PARIS in Dopaminergic Neuronal Survival.
Authors: Lee Y, Stevens DA, Kang SU, Jiang H, Lee YI, Ko HS, Scarffe LA, Umanah GE, Kang H, Ham S, Kam TI, Allen K, Brahmachari S, Kim JW, Neifert S, Yun SP, Fiesel FC, Springer W, Dawson VL, Shin JH, Dawson TM.
Journal: Cell Rep. 2017 Jan 24;18(4):918-932.
PMID: 28122242       (This article is OPEN ACCESS if you would like to read it)

In their study the researchers found that Parkin is not the only Parkinson’s associated protein in the PARIS story.

We have previously talked about the protein Pink1 (click here to read more on) – and yes, you would be forgiven if you start to think that all Parkinson’s related proteins start with the latter ‘P’. Pink1 grabs Parkin and causes it to bind to dysfunctional mitochondria. Parkin then signals to the rest of the cell for that particular mitochondria to be disposed of. In this study, the researchers found that Pink1 also grabs PARIS and signals for Parkin to dispose of it. In the absence of Pink1, normal Parkin protein does not label old PARIS protein for disposal and PARIS starts to pile up.

The researchers then began manipulating the levels of Pink in the brains of mice and they observed PARIS-dependent cell loss – that is to say, in the absence of Pink1, cells died only when PARIS was present.

These findings suggest that therapies targeting PARIS could be used in people with Parkinson’s disease who are carrying either a Parkin or a Pink1 mutation (both very common in early onset Parkinson’s disease).

What does it all mean?

People with early onset Parkinson’s disease quite often have a genetic mutation in one of a small number of genes – Pink1 and Parkin being prominent amongst these genes. The researchers who conducted the study that we have reviewed today have identified a common mechanism by which both of these proteins could be acting in their roles in Parkinson’s disease: a protein called PARIS.

Currently there is no treatment (that we are aware of) that targets the PARIS protein – nothing in the clinic nor being experimentally tested. Obviously, however, PARIS represents a VERY interesting protein for further investigations. The Dawson lab has several patents on PARIS (Click here and here for more on these), so evidently people will be working on drug candidates that inhibit PARIS.

There is a naturally occurring inhibitor, a micro RNA cluster miR-17-92 (also known as oncomir-1), which reduces the production of PARIS protein by blocking PARIS RNA (Click here for more on this). Using this micro RNA to target PARIS will be very difficult (both activating/delivering the micro RNA and unknown off target effects).

We are assuming that Prof Dawson and colleagues are rapidly screening compounds to determine which can block or inhibit PARIS activity and we will eagerly wait to see the results of that work.

Watch this space.


The banner for today’s post was sourced from Wallpapercave


EDITORIAL NOTE: Yay, 100 posts!