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The Parkinson's disease protein DJ-1 is neuroprotective due to cysteine-sulfinic acid-driven mitochondrial localization
Author(s) -
Rosa Canet-Aviles,
Mark A. Wilson,
David W. Miller,
Rili Ahmad,
Chris McLendon,
Sourav Bandyopadhyay,
Melisa J. Baptista,
Dagmar Ringe,
Gregory A. Petsko,
Mark Cookson
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.0402959101
Subject(s) - cysteine , neuroprotection , gene isoform , oxidative stress , mitochondrion , biochemistry , mutant , chemistry , programmed cell death , cysteine metabolism , microbiology and biotechnology , oxidative phosphorylation , biology , apoptosis , pharmacology , enzyme , gene
Loss-of-function DJ-1 mutations can cause early-onset Parkinson's disease. The function of DJ-1 is unknown, but an acidic isoform accumulates after oxidative stress, leading to the suggestion that DJ-1 is protective under these conditions. We addressed whether this represents a posttranslational modification at cysteine residues by systematically mutating cysteine residues in human DJ-1. WT or C53A DJ-1 was readily oxidized in cultured cells, generating a pI 5.8 isoform, but an artificial C106A mutant was not. We observed a cysteine-sulfinic acid at C106 in crystalline DJ-1 but no modification of C53 or C46. Oxidation of DJ-1 was promoted by the crystallization procedure. In addition, oxidation-induced mitochondrial relocalization of DJ-1 and protection against cell death were abrogated in C106A but not C53A or C46A. We suggest that DJ-1 protects against neuronal death, and that this is signaled by acidification of the key cysteine residue, C106.

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