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Dysfunction of RAB39B-Mediated Vesicular Trafficking in Lewy Body Diseases.

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posted on 2021-08-27, 10:32 authored by David J Koss, Susanna Campesan, Flaviano Giorgini, Tiago F Outeiro
Intracellular vesicular trafficking is essential for neuronal development, function, and homeostasis and serves to process, direct, and sort proteins, lipids, and other cargo throughout the cell. This intricate system of membrane trafficking between different compartments is tightly orchestrated by Ras analog in brain (RAB) GTPases and their effectors. Of the 66 members of the RAB family in humans, many have been implicated in neurodegenerative diseases and impairment of their functions contributes to cellular stress, protein aggregation, and death. Critically, RAB39B loss-of-function mutations are known to be associated with X-linked intellectual disability and with rare early-onset Parkinson's disease. Moreover, recent studies have highlighted altered RAB39B expression in idiopathic cases of several Lewy body diseases (LBDs). This review contextualizes the role of RAB proteins in LBDs and highlights the consequences of RAB39B impairment in terms of endosomal trafficking, neurite outgrowth, synaptic maturation, autophagy, as well as alpha-synuclein homeostasis. Additionally, the potential for therapeutic intervention is examined via a discussion of the recent progress towards the development of specific RAB modulators.

Funding

T.F.O. is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy (EXC 2067/1- 390729940) and by SFB1286 (Project B8). S.C. and F.G. are supported by funding from Parkinson's UK (G-1802). D.K., T.F.O., and F.G. are supported by Alzheimer's Research UK Newcastle Network Centre. T.F.O and D.J.K are supported by the Lewy Body Society (LBS-0007).

History

Citation

Koss, D.J., Campesan, S., Giorgini, F. and Outeiro, T.F. (2021), Dysfunction of RAB39B-Mediated Vesicular Trafficking in Lewy Body Diseases. Mov Disord, 36: 1744-1758. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.28605

Author affiliation

Department of Genetics and Genome Biology,

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Movement disorders

Volume

36

Pagination

1744-1758

Publisher

Wiley for Movement Disorders Society

issn

0885-3185

eissn

1531-8257

Acceptance date

2021-03-12

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-08-27

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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