Realistic illustration depicting alpha-synuclein-ClpP interaction damaging Parkinson's-related mitochondria, blocked by CS2 compound, with Case Western researchers in a lab setting.
Realistic illustration depicting alpha-synuclein-ClpP interaction damaging Parkinson's-related mitochondria, blocked by CS2 compound, with Case Western researchers in a lab setting.
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Case Western researchers identify alpha-synuclein–ClpP interaction that may drive Parkinson’s-related mitochondrial damage

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እውነት ተፈትሸ

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University report they have identified an abnormal interaction between the Parkinson’s-linked protein alpha-synuclein and the enzyme ClpP that disrupts mitochondrial function in experimental models. They also describe an experimental compound, CS2, designed to block that interaction, which they say improved movement and cognitive performance and reduced brain inflammation in lab and mouse studies.

Parkinson’s disease affects about 1 million people in the United States, with nearly 90,000 new diagnoses each year, according to the Parkinson’s Foundation.

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University say they have identified a molecular interaction that could help explain how Parkinson’s disease damages neurons. In a study published in Molecular Neurodegeneration, the team reports that alpha-synuclein—a protein known to accumulate in Parkinson’s disease—can bind abnormally to an enzyme called ClpP.

According to the researchers, ClpP normally helps maintain cellular health, but the abnormal binding interferes with its function and contributes to mitochondrial failure. Mitochondria are the cell’s energy-producing structures, and the study says their impairment can trigger neurodegeneration and brain cell loss. The researchers also reported that this interaction sped up Parkinson’s progression across several experimental models.

"We've uncovered a harmful interaction between proteins that damages the brain's cellular powerhouses, called mitochondria," said Xin Qi, the study’s senior author and the Jeanette M. and Joseph S. Silber Professor of Brain Sciences at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine. "More importantly, we've developed a targeted approach that can block this interaction and restore healthy brain cell function."

To counter the effect, the researchers developed an experimental treatment called CS2, which they describe as a decoy designed to draw alpha-synuclein away from ClpP and prevent damage to the cell’s energy systems.

In tests across multiple models—including human brain tissue, patient-derived neurons and mouse models—the team reported that CS2 reduced brain inflammation and was associated with improvements in movement and cognitive performance.

"This represents a fundamentally new approach to treating Parkinson's disease," said Di Hu, a research scientist in the School of Medicine’s Department of Physiology and Biophysics. "Instead of just treating the symptoms, we're targeting one of the root causes of the disease itself."

The team said its next steps include refining CS2 for potential use in people, expanding safety and effectiveness testing, and identifying molecular biomarkers tied to disease progression, with the longer-term goal of moving toward human clinical trials.

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Realistic illustration of UCLA Health study linking residential chlorpyrifos exposure to heightened Parkinson's risk, featuring pesticide spraying near homes, Parkinson's symptoms, brain neuron damage, and lab research.
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UCLA Health study links long-term chlorpyrifos exposure to higher Parkinson’s risk

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A UCLA Health study reports that people with long-term residential exposure to the pesticide chlorpyrifos had more than a 2.5-fold higher likelihood of developing Parkinson’s disease. The research, published in Molecular Neurodegeneration, pairs human exposure estimates with animal and zebrafish experiments that found dopamine-neuron damage and disruptions to the brain’s protein “cleanup” system.

Researchers in Australia have found that a mysterious FDA-approved drug, called compound X, removes toxic alpha-synuclein proteins from the brains of mice with Parkinson's-like symptoms. The treatment improved the animals' balance and mobility by enhancing the brain's glymphatic waste disposal system. The findings were presented at a symposium in the UK.

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Researchers at UCLA Health and UC San Francisco have identified a natural defense mechanism in brain cells that helps remove toxic tau protein, potentially explaining why some neurons resist Alzheimer's damage better than others. The study, published in Cell, used CRISPR screening on lab-grown human neurons to uncover this system. Findings suggest new therapeutic avenues for neurodegenerative diseases.

Researchers at LMU Munich, Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, TU Darmstadt and Nanion Technologies report that the lysosomal ion channel TMEM175 helps prevent excessive acidification inside lysosomes, a malfunction that the team says could contribute to toxic buildup associated with Parkinson’s disease. The findings were reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

በAI የተዘገበ እውነት ተፈትሸ

Oregon State University scientists report they have monitored, second by second, how copper ions promote aggregation of amyloid-beta—an Alzheimer’s-associated protein—and how different metal-binding molecules can disrupt or reverse that clumping, using a fluorescence anisotropy approach described in a study published in ACS Omega.

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