Neurobiology of Disease (Jun 2015)

D1 dopamine receptor stimulation impairs striatal proteasome activity in Parkinsonism through 26S proteasome disassembly

  • Pedro Barroso-Chinea,
  • Marie-Laure Thiolat,
  • Simone Bido,
  • Audrey Martinez,
  • Evelyne Doudnikoff,
  • Jérôme Baufreton,
  • Mathieu Bourdenx,
  • Bertrand Bloch,
  • Erwan Bezard,
  • Marie-Laure Martin-Negrier

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 78
pp. 77 – 87

Abstract

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Among the mechanisms underlying the development of L-dopa-induced dyskinesia (LID) in Parkinson's disease, complex alterations in dopamine signaling in D1 receptor (D1R)-expressing medium spiny striatal neurons have been unraveled such as, but not limited to, dysregulation of D1R expression, lateral diffusion, intraneuronal trafficking, subcellular localization and desensitization, leading to a pathological anchorage of D1R at the plasma membrane. Such anchorage is partly due to a decreased proteasomal activity that is specific of the L-dopa-exposed dopamine-depleted striatum, results from D1R activation and feeds-back the D1R exaggerated cell surface abundance. The precise mechanisms by which L-dopa affects striatal proteasome activity remained however unknown. We here show, in a series of in vitro ex vivo and in vivo models, that such rapid modulation of striatal proteasome activity intervenes through D1R-mediated disassembly of the 26S proteasome rather than change in transcription or translation of proteasome or proteasome subunits intraneuronal relocalization.

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