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J Biol Chem, Vol. 273, Issue 41, 26292-26294, October 9, 1998
COMMUNICATION
Binding of -Synuclein to Brain Vesicles Is Abolished by
Familial Parkinson's Disease Mutation*
Poul H.
Jensen §¶,
Morten S.
Nielsen ,
Ross
Jakes ,
Carlos G.
Dotti§, and
Michel
Goedert
From the Department of Medical Biochemistry, Building
170, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark, the
§ European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, 69012 Heidelberg, Federal Republic of Germany, and the Medical
Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge
CB2 2QH, United Kingdom
 |
ABSTRACT |
The presynaptic protein -synuclein has been
implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. First, two
missense mutations A30P and A53T cause inheritable early onset
Parkinson's disease in some families. Secondly, -synuclein is
present in Lewy bodies of affected nerve cells in the predominant
sporadic type of Parkinson's disease as well as in dementia with Lewy
bodies. We demonstrate in the rat optic system that a portion of
-synuclein is carried by the vesicle-moving fast component of axonal
transport and that it binds to rat brain vesicles through its
amino-terminal repeat region. We find -synuclein with the A30P
mutation of familial Parkinson's disease devoid of vesicle-binding
activity and propose that mutant -synuclein may accumulate, leading
to assembly into Lewy body filaments.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Parkinson's disease is a common neurodegenerative disorder that
affects approximately 0.2% of the population. Neuropathologically, it
is characterized by filamentous Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites, in
dopaminergic nerve cells of the substantia nigra and other nerve cell
populations (1). Their presence may cause neurodegeneration, but the
mechanisms underlying their formation are unknown. Two separate
missense mutations (A30P and A53T) in -synuclein have been
identified in some families with early-onset Parkinson's disease (2,
3). -Synuclein is an abundant 140-amino acid neuronal phosphoprotein
that is localized in the presynaptic terminals (for a review, see Ref.
4). This normal localization is perturbed in idiopathic Parkinson's
disease and in dementia with Lewy bodies (5-7), a common late-life
dementia that is clinically similar to Alzheimer's disease (8). In
these diseases, -synuclein accumulates in the cell bodies and
neurites of degenerating neurons as a major component of Lewy bodies
and Lewy neurites. Here we report that in rat optic nerve a portion of
-synuclein is carried in the vesicle-moving fast component of axonal
transport. Fast axonal transport represents the movement of
tubulovesicular structures along microtubules driven by motor proteins
(9). Accordingly, we show that -synuclein binds to vesicles from rat
brain through its amino-terminal repeat region. -Synuclein with the
A30P mutation of familial Parkinson's disease is devoid of significant
vesicle-binding activity. As a result, it may accumulate, leading to
its assembly into Lewy body filaments.
 |
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
Axonal Transport--
Adult female rats received a bilateral
intraocular injection of 0.5 mCi of [35S]methionine
(DuPont) (10). The animals were killed by cervical dislocation after
4 h, and their optic nerves, optic chiasmata, optic tracts, and
lateral geniculate bodies were dissected. The proximal 3 mm were
removed from the samples, to avoid labeled material moving in slow
component b of axonal transport
(SCb).1 Tissues were
homogenized in 8 M urea, 0.5% SDS, 2% mercaptoethanol, and insoluble material was removed by centrifugation. For
immunoprecipitation, supernatants were diluted 25-fold in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), in the presence of a mixture of
protease inhibitors (Complete, Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim,
Federal Republic of Germany), cleared of endogenous IgG by incubation
with 60 µl of protein A-Sepharose slurry for 1 h, and incubated
with 20 µg of affinity-purified rabbit anti- -synuclein IgG or 2 µl of mouse monoclonal anti-SNAP25 (Affinity Inc.) for 16 h at
4 °C. IgG was collected by the addition of 40 µl of protein
A-Sepharose slurry for 1 h, followed by 7 × 10 ml washes in
PBS, 0.1% Triton X-100. The synuclein/IgG/protein A-Sepharose was
heated to 95 °C for 5 min in 1% SDS, 20 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT), 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, and
eluted synuclein was recovered by centrifugation in a spin column
(Bio-Rad Laboratories). The eluate was brought to 20% glycerol and
loaded directly on a 10-20% gradient SDS-polyacrylamide gel that was
further processed for fluorography at 80 °C. Control experiments
showed that the ratio of anti- -synuclein IgG/optic nerve resulted in
the quantitative precipitation of -synuclein. The -synuclein
antibody was raised in a rabbit using recombinant human -synuclein
as the immunogen. By immunoblotting of rat brain extract, it recognized
-synuclein and the related -synuclein. It similarly recognized
recombinant human -synuclein and -synuclein.
Vesicle Binding--
A modification of the flotation assay of
Brown and Rose (11) was used. All procedures were carried out at
4 °C. One adult rat cerebral hemisphere was Dounce-homogenized in
2.5 ml of 5 mM dithiothreitol, 2 mM EDTA, 9%
sucrose, 25 mM MES, pH 7.0, in the presence of a mixture of
protease inhibitors (Complete, Boehringer Mannheim). Nuclei and debris
were removed by a 5-min centrifugation at 2,500 rpm, and a crude
vesicle fraction was isolated by ultracentrifugation of the supernatant
at 100,000 × g for 1 h. The resulting pellet was
resuspended by Dounce homogenization in the above buffer. Vesicle
binding was performed by incubating 100 µl of resuspended vesicles
(approximately 7 mg of protein/ml) with 1 µM biotinylated probe for 2 h. The solution was brought to 55% sucrose in a
volume of 0.35 ml, placed into a 4-ml ultracentrifuge tube, and
overlaid with 3 ml of a 48-20% sucrose gradient. Flotation was
carried out for 16 h at 100,000 × g in a SW60
swinging rotor. Following ultracentrifugation, the gradient was divided
into 9 fractions, which were collected from the top. A sample of each
fraction was used for determining the sucrose concentration by
refractometry and the protein concentration (Bio-Rad Protein Assay,
Bio-Rad Laboratories). For localizing -synuclein in the gradient, an aliquot of each fraction (200 µl) was precipitated with 20%
trichloroacetic acid, run on 10-20% SDS-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis, and transferred to nitrocellulose. Endogenous rat
-synuclein was identified with affinity-purified rabbit
anti-synuclein IgG, followed by HRP-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG
(Amersham). Biotinylated human -synuclein proteins were identified
with HRP-conjugated streptavidin (Boehringer Mannheim). HRP was
visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech).
-Synuclein Constructs--
Human -synuclein was expressed
and purified as described (12). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to
produce the A30P and A53T mutants of -synuclein. Human
-synuclein-(30-140) and -synuclein-(55-140) were produced by
polymerase chain reaction. All constructs were verified by DNA
sequencing and subcloned into expression plasmid pRK172. Expression and
purification of the recombinant proteins were done as described (12).
The molecular masses of A30P -synuclein and A53T -synuclein were
determined by mass spectrometry and corresponded to the expected
values. Biotinylation of -synuclein proteins was performed by
incubating 50 µM recombinant protein with 0.75 mM sulfosuccinimidobiotin (Pierce) for 1 h at 22 °C in 100 mM sodium carbonate buffer, pH 8.0. The reaction was
terminated by quenching with 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, and
the proteins were extensively dialyzed against PBS. Aliquots were
brought to 50% glycerol and stored at 20 °C. Dot-blotting showed
that the degree of biotinylation of individual proteins varied by less
than 50%.
 |
RESULTS |
Axonal transport of -synuclein was investigated in the rat
visual system (10). Retinal ganglion cells were pulse-labeled by an
intraocular injection of [35S]methionine, and movement of
radiolabeled -synuclein through ganglion cell axons was monitored by
quantitative immunoprecipitation. Animals were sacrificed 4 h
after the injection, the first 3 mm of the optic nerve were discarded,
and -synuclein was immunoprecipitated from the remainder of the
visual system. Proteins labeled at 4 h are transported by fast
axonal transport (100-400 mm/day) (10). As shown in Fig.
1, two immunoprecipitated labeled bands
were detected at 4 h; they co-migrated with recombinant human
-synuclein and the related -synuclein (12, 13), indicating that
both synucleins move in the fast component of axonal transport.
Comparison of the amounts of immunoprecipitated labeled synucleins at
4, 30, and 96 h showed that approximately 15% of the total pool
of -synuclein and -synuclein moves by fast axonal transport, with the remainder moving in
SCb.2

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Fig. 1.
Fast axonal transport of -synuclein.
Rat retinal neurones were labeled by intraocular injection of 0.5 mCi
of [35S]methionine. Axonally transported synucleins were
immunoprecipitated from extracts of optic nerve, optic chiasm, optic
tract, and lateral geniculate body 4 h later, resolved by
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and processed for fluorography.
Based on co-migration with the recombinant human proteins, the labeled
bands were identified as -synuclein and -synuclein. Molecular
markers are shown to the left (Mr × 10 3).
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Fast axonal transport of a portion of optic nerve -synuclein
suggested that it may be associated with the vesicles and motor proteins that are transported at this speed. We therefore used a
flotation assay to study the association of wild-type and mutated -synuclein with vesicles. Upon ultracentrifugation, vesicles and
their associated proteins float in the sucrose gradient until they
reach their density, whereas non-bound material stays in the denser
bottom fraction. Using this assay, some of the -synuclein from a
postnuclear supernatant of rat brain was found in the densest fraction,
and some floated to a density of 1.0995-1.1259 g/ml (Fig.
2, panel 1). The
postnuclear supernatant was then divided into cytosolic and vesicle
fractions by ultracentrifugation, prior to flotation analysis (Fig. 2,
panels 2 and 3). Cytosolic
-synuclein stayed in the dense fraction, whereas all the
vesicle-associated -synuclein floated to 1.0995-1.1259 g/ml. The
distribution of vesicle-associated -synuclein in the gradient was
identical with that of synaptic vesicle-associated protein SNAP25 (Fig.
2, panel 4). To exclude that endogenous cytosolic
-synuclein didn't just become trapped in inside-out vesicles, we
incubated rat brain vesicles with biotinylated recombinant human
-synuclein (Fig. 3) prior to
flotation. Like endogenous rat -synuclein, the majority of
biotinylated human -synuclein was associated with vesicle fractions,
with some remaining in the denser fractions (Fig. 2, panel
5). Control experiments showed that biotinylation did not interfere with the vesicle binding activity of human -synuclein (not
shown).

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Fig. 2.
Binding of -synuclein proteins to rat
brain vesicles. Adult rat brain extract was fractionated into
postnuclear supernatant, cytosol, and vesicles. Binding of
-synuclein to vesicles was measured in a flotation assay. The
gradient was divided into 9 separate fractions (ranging in density from
1.0690 to 1.1634 g/ml), and -synuclein was visualized in each
fraction. Endogenous rat -synuclein was measured in the postnuclear
fraction (panel 1), the cytosol (panel
2), and the crude vesicle fraction (panel
3). Endogenous rat SNAP25 was measured in the crude vesicle
fraction (panel 4). Binding of biotinylated human
-synuclein proteins to crude vesicles was measured in
panels 5-9: wild-type -synuclein,
panel 5; -synuclein-(30-140), panel
6; -synuclein-(55-140), panel 7;
A30P -synuclein, panel 8; A53T -synuclein,
panel 9. Similar results were obtained in four
separate experiments. Molecular weight markers are shown to the
left (Mr × 10 3)
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Fig. 3.
Biotinylated recombinant human -synuclein
proteins. Top panel, schematic diagram of
the 140-amino acid human -synuclein, with the seven core repeats
shown as black boxes. The borders of
-synuclein-(30-140) and -synuclein-(55-140) are indicated, as
are the positions of the familial Parkinson's disease mutations A30P
and A53T. Bottom panel, recombinant wild-type
biotinylated human -synuclein, lane 1;
biotinylated A53T -synuclein, lane 2;
biotinylated A30P -synuclein, lane 3;
biotinylated -synuclein-(30-140), lane 4;
biotinylated -synuclein-(55-140), lane 5. The
weaker band in lane 3 corresponds to dimerized
A30P -synuclein. Molecular weight markers are shown to the
left (Mr × 10 3).
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Over half the sequence of the 140-amino acid -synuclein is taken up
by seven imperfect repeats of 11 amino acids each, with the core
consensus sequence KTKEGV (12, 14-16; Fig. 3). To localize the
vesicle-binding domain of -synuclein, we expressed and biotinylated human -synuclein-(30-140), which lacks the first two repeats, and
-synuclein-(55-140), which lacks the first four repeats (Fig. 3).
In the vesicle-binding assay, the concentration of
-synuclein-(30-140) was highest in the cytosolic bottom fraction
(Fig. 2, panel 6). In particular, the peak of
material in the vesicle fraction at 1.1108 g/ml that is characteristic
of full-length -synuclein was missing, indicating a significant
reduction in vesicle-binding activity. -Synuclein-(55-140) was
devoid of vesicle-binding activity, as indicated by the finding that it
remained in the denser bottom fractions (Fig. 2, panel
7). These results demonstrate that the vesicle-binding
activity of human -synuclein resides in the first four
amino-terminal repeats.
We next investigated the ability of recombinant human A30P
-synuclein and A53T -synuclein to bind to vesicles. Both
mutations, which are located in the repeat region of -synuclein,
lead to early-onset Parkinson's disease, by as yet unknown mechanisms. Purified recombinant A30P and A53T -synuclein were biotinylated (Fig. 3) and used in the vesicle-binding assay. As shown in Fig. 2,
panel 8, A30P -synuclein was devoid of
significant vesicle-binding activity. By contrast, A53T -synuclein
bound as well to vesicles as wild-type -synuclein (Fig. 2,
panel 9).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Axonal transport studies are useful for identifying specific
associations of proteins with intracellular structures. Thus, proteins
associated with tubulovesicular structures move within the fast
component, whereas proteins interacting with non-tubulovesicular structures, such as cytoskeletal elements, move within slow component a
and/or SCb (10). Proteins with multiple associations move at multiple
rates. -Synuclein belongs to the latter class, as it moves within
both the fast component and SCb. Movement of -synuclein in the fast
component suggested that it might bind to vesicles. This was
investigated directly using a flotation assay of vesicles from rat
brain. A portion of -synuclein was associated with vesicles, to
which it bound through its amino-terminal four repeats. These findings
demonstrate a function for the repeat region of -synuclein. It is
unclear whether -synuclein binds to lipids or to vesicle proteins.
Previous work has shown an affinity of endogenous -synuclein for
synaptosomes, and similarities between the repeats in -synuclein and
in apolipoproteins have been described, suggesting an interaction between vesicle lipids and the hydrophobic repeats of -synuclein (14, 15, 17). Moreover, a recent study has shown the binding of
-synuclein through its repeats to small synthetic unilamellar liposomes that are rich in phospholipids (18). Biophysical studies have
shown that recombinant human -synuclein is a natively unfolded molecule, with only little secondary structure (19). However, like
other natively unfolded molecules, it is likely that it becomes structured upon binding to vesicles (18, 19).
The mutations in -synuclein that lead to familial Parkinson's
disease are located in the amino-terminal repeats, the same region that
binds to vesicles. We therefore investigated their influence on the
binding of human -synuclein to rat brain vesicles. Recombinant human
A53T -synuclein bound in a similar manner to recombinant wild-type
human or endogenous rat -synuclein. Rat -synuclein has a
threonine at position 53, like the mutated human protein (14, 15).
Except for this difference, human and rat -synucleins are identical
in sequence in their vesicle-binding repeats but differ in another six
amino acids downstream of the amino-terminal four repeats. This renders
interpretation of binding of human A53T -synuclein to rat brain
vesicles difficult. Understanding the effects of this mutation may
require studies on primate or human brain. Similar complications do not
arise with the second mutation in -synuclein, which changes alanine
residue 30 to proline. This residue is alanine in all known
-synuclein sequences (12, 14-17). In the vesicle-binding assay,
recombinant human A30P -synuclein was devoid of significant binding
activity. In nerve cells A30P -synuclein may thus not move in the
fast component of axonal transport, but only in SCb. The redistribution
of A30P -synuclein resulting from a loss in vesicle-binding activity
may be a major deleterious effect of the mutation. Over time, it will
lead to a slow build-up of protein and, upon reaching a critical
concentration, A30P -synuclein may assemble into Lewy body
filaments. In addition, A30P -synuclein may also have a higher
tendency to assemble into filaments than the wild-type protein.
-Synuclein is an abundant presynaptic protein (20, 21), whereas Lewy
bodies and Lewy neurites are found in nerve cell bodies and abnormal
neurites (1, 5-7), indicative of an abnormal localization of the
assembled protein. In familial Parkinson's disease, assembly into
filaments may result from a redistribution of A30P -synuclein, due
to a lack in vesicle-binding activity. In idiopathic Parkinson's
disease and in dementia with Lewy bodies, unknown post-translational
modifications of -synuclein or its putative "receptor" molecules
in the axonal transport apparatus may have a similar effect.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
This work was supported by Danmarks Sundhedsfond, The Danish
Medical Associations Research Fund, and Direktør Jacob Madsens & hustru Olga Madsens Fond.The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement" in
accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
¶
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.:
45-894-228-56; Fax: 45-861-311-60; E-mail: phj{at}biokemi.au.dk.
The abbreviations used are:
SCb, slow component
b of axonal transport; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; HRP, horseradish
peroxidase; MES, 4-morpholineethanesulfonic acid.
2
P. H. Jensen and C. G. Dotti,
unpublished observation.
 |
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D. L. Fortin, V. M. Nemani, S. M. Voglmaier, M. D. Anthony, T. A. Ryan, and R. H. Edwards
Neural Activity Controls the Synaptic Accumulation of {alpha}-Synuclein
J. Neurosci.,
November 23, 2005;
25(47):
10913 - 10921.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. A. Utton, W. J. Noble, J. E. Hill, B. H. Anderton, and D. P. Hanger
Molecular motors implicated in the axonal transport of tau and {alpha}-synuclein
J. Cell Sci.,
October 15, 2005;
118(20):
4645 - 4654.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S.-i. Kubo, V. M. Nemani, R. J. Chalkley, M. D. Anthony, N. Hattori, Y. Mizuno, R. H. Edwards, and D. L. Fortin
A Combinatorial Code for the Interaction of {alpha}-Synuclein with Membranes
J. Biol. Chem.,
September 9, 2005;
280(36):
31664 - 31672.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C.-W. Liu, B. I. Giasson, K. A. Lewis, V. M. Lee, G. N. DeMartino, and P. J. Thomas
A Precipitating Role for Truncated {alpha}-Synuclein and the Proteasome in {alpha}-Synuclein Aggregation: IMPLICATIONS FOR PATHOGENESIS OF PARKINSON DISEASE
J. Biol. Chem.,
June 17, 2005;
280(24):
22670 - 22678.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C. Dixon, N. Mathias, R. M. Zweig, D. A. Davis, and D. S. Gross
{alpha}-Synuclein Targets the Plasma Membrane via the Secretory Pathway and Induces Toxicity in Yeast
Genetics,
May 1, 2005;
170(1):
47 - 59.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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E. W. Doss-Pepe, L. Chen, and K. Madura
{alpha}-Synuclein and Parkin Contribute to the Assembly of Ubiquitin Lysine 63-linked Multiubiquitin Chains
J. Biol. Chem.,
April 29, 2005;
280(17):
16619 - 16624.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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T. S. Ulmer, A. Bax, N. B. Cole, and R. L. Nussbaum
Structure and Dynamics of Micelle-bound Human {alpha}-Synuclein
J. Biol. Chem.,
March 11, 2005;
280(10):
9595 - 9603.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. C. Lee, R. Langen, P. A. Hummel, H. B. Gray, and J. R. Winkler
{alpha}-Synuclein structures from fluorescence energy-transfer kinetics: Implications for the role of the protein in Parkinson's disease
PNAS,
November 23, 2004;
101(47):
16466 - 16471.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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R. Hodara, E. H. Norris, B. I. Giasson, A. J. Mishizen-Eberz, D. R. Lynch, V. M.-Y. Lee, and H. Ischiropoulos
Functional Consequences of {alpha}-Synuclein Tyrosine Nitration: DIMINISHED BINDING TO LIPID VESICLES AND INCREASED FIBRIL FORMATION
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 12, 2004;
279(46):
47746 - 47753.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. Chandra, F. Fornai, H.-B. Kwon, U. Yazdani, D. Atasoy, X. Liu, R. E. Hammer, G. Battaglia, D. C. German, P. E. Castillo, et al.
Double-knockout mice for {alpha}- and {beta}-synucleins: Effect on synaptic functions
PNAS,
October 12, 2004;
101(41):
14966 - 14971.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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D. L. Fortin, M. D. Troyer, K. Nakamura, S.-i. Kubo, M. D. Anthony, and R. H. Edwards
Lipid Rafts Mediate the Synaptic Localization of {alpha}-Synuclein
J. Neurosci.,
July 28, 2004;
24(30):
6715 - 6723.
[Abstract]
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E. Lindersson, R. Beedholm, P. Hojrup, T. Moos, W. Gai, K. B. Hendil, and P. H. Jensen
Proteasomal Inhibition by {alpha}-Synuclein Filaments and Oligomers
J. Biol. Chem.,
March 26, 2004;
279(13):
12924 - 12934.
[Abstract]
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A. R. Saha, J. Hill, M. A. Utton, A. A. Asuni, S. Ackerley, A. J. Grierson, C. C. Miller, A. M. Davies, V. L. Buchman, B. H. Anderton, et al.
Parkinson's disease {alpha}-synuclein mutations exhibit defective axonal transport in cultured neurons
J. Cell Sci.,
March 1, 2004;
117(7):
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[Abstract]
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M. J. Baptista, M. R. Cookson, and D. W. Miller
Parkin and {alpha}-Synuclein: Opponent Actions in The Pathogenesis of Parkinson'S Disease
Neuroscientist,
February 1, 2004;
10(1):
63 - 72.
[Abstract]
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