Polo-like kinase 2 regulates selective autophagic α-synuclein clearance and suppresses its toxicity in vivo. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • An increase in α-synuclein levels due to gene duplications/triplications or impaired degradation is sufficient to trigger its aggregation and cause familial Parkinson disease (PD). Therefore, lowering α-synuclein levels represents a viable therapeutic strategy for the treatment of PD and related synucleinopathies. Here, we report that Polo-like kinase 2 (PLK2), an enzyme up-regulated in synucleinopathy-diseased brains, interacts with, phosphorylates and enhances α-synuclein autophagic degradation in a kinase activity-dependent manner. PLK2-mediated degradation of α-synuclein requires both phosphorylation at S129 and PLK2/α-synuclein complex formation. In a rat genetic model of PD, PLK2 overexpression reduces intraneuronal human α-synuclein accumulation, suppresses dopaminergic neurodegeneration, and reverses hemiparkinsonian motor impairments induced by α-synuclein overexpression. This PLK2-mediated neuroprotective effect is also dependent on PLK2 activity and α-synuclein phosphorylation. Collectively, our findings demonstrate that PLK2 is a previously undescribed regulator of α-synuclein turnover and that modulating its kinase activity could be a viable target for the treatment of synucleinopathies.

publication date

  • August 27, 2013

Research

keywords

  • Gene Expression Regulation
  • Parkinson Disease
  • Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases
  • Proteolysis
  • alpha-Synuclein

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3799334

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84885363886

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1073/pnas.1309991110

PubMed ID

  • 23983262

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 110

issue

  • 41