| 03 Juin 2013
 Parkinson's disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that  affects more than seven million people worldwide. Most cases of the  disease occur in older individuals and are sporadic (non-familial), but  around 15% of patients develop symptoms early in life because of  inherited mutations in a limited number of disease genes. Why Parkin  mutations are especially detrimental in nerve cells is not fully  understood, but previous research indicates that Parkin regulates the  function of mitochondria, the organelles that generate energy in the  cell. Some disease mutations in the PARKIN gene can be easily  explained since they lead to loss or instability of the Parkin protein,  but many others are more difficult to understand. Around 50% of cases of familial recessive Parkinson's disease are caused by mutations in the PARKIN gene, which encodes a protein that belongs to the RBR ubiquitin ligase  enzyme family. Enzymes in this family couple other proteins in the cell  to a molecule called ubiquitin, a step that can alter the function or  stability of these target proteins. To understand how Parkin and other  RBR ubiquitin ligase enzymes achieve this, EMBO Young Investigator David  Komander and his coworker Tobias Wauer crystallized a form of human  Parkin and used X-ray diffraction patterns to determine how the Parkin  protein chain folds into a three-dimensional structure. Their  experiments revealed an in-built control mechanism for Parkin activity,  which is lost in the presence of some of the mutations responsible for  Parkinson's disease. Wauer and Komander pinpointed amino acids of Parkin  with key functions in ubiquitin ligase activity that are sensitive to  blocking by reagents previously characterized in their laboratory. "This  sensitivity to inhibitors that were developed for a very different  class of enzymes is particularly exciting," Komander remarked. "We could  also show that these inhibitors affect related RBR ubiquitin ligases  such as HOIP, which is important for inflammatory immune responses." The crystal structure of Parkin is already revealing some of the  secrets of this molecule, which under the right conditions can protect  cells from the damage that arises during Parkinson’s disease. “In time  the structure may also allow development of other compounds that alter  Parkin activity, which could serve as ways to limit the progression and  impact of Parkinson’s disease,” concluded Komander.
HEIDELBERG, 31 May 2013 – Researchers  at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in the United Kingdom have  determined the crystal structure of Parkin, a protein found in cells  that when mutated can lead to a hereditary form of Parkinson’s disease.  The results, which are published in The EMBO Journal, define  the position of many of the mutations linked to hereditary Parkinson’s  disease and explain how these alterations may affect the stability and  function of the protein. The findings may in time reveal how the  activity of Parkin is affected in patients with this rare but  debilitating type of Parkinson’s disease.









