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Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson's mystery

Date:
March 13, 2025
Source:
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
Summary:
Researchers have made a huge leap forward in the fight against Parkinson's disease, solving a decades-long mystery. In a major breakthrough, they have been able to see the human PINK1 protein and how it is switched on for the first time. The discovery is a significant milestone in Parkinson's research that paves the way for developing new life-changing drugs.
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WEHI researchers have made a huge leap forward in the fight against Parkinson's disease, solving a decades-long mystery that paves the way for development of new drugs to treat the condition.

First discovered over 20 years ago, PINK1 is a protein directly linked to Parkinson's disease -- the fastest growing neurodegenerative condition in the world. Until now, no one had seen what human PINK1 looks like, how PINK1 attaches to the surface of damaged mitochondria, or how it is switched on.

In a major breakthrough, researchers at the WEHI Parkinson's Disease Research Centre have determined the first ever structure of human PINK1 bound to mitochondria, in findings published in Science. The work could help find new treatments for the condition that currently has no cure or drug to stop its progression.

At a glance

  • In a world-first, WEHI researchers have discovered what human PINK1 looks like and how it is activated.

  • PINK1 is a protein linked to Parkinson's disease, the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer's. There is no cure for Parkinson's.

  • This discovery, published in Science, is a huge leap forward in the fight against Parkinson's with the hope that it will accelerate the search for a drug to stop the condition.

Parkinson's disease is insidious, often taking years, sometimes decades to diagnose. Often associated with tremors, there are close to 40 symptoms including cognitive impairment, speech issues, body temperature regulation and vision problems.

In Australia, over 200,000 people live with Parkinson's and between 10% and 20% have Young Onset Parkinson's Disease -- meaning they are diagnosed under the age of fifty. The impact of Parkinson's on the Australian economy and healthcare systems is estimated to be over $10 billion each year.

Breakthrough after decades of research

Mitochondria produce energy at a cellular level in all living things, and cells that require a lot of energy can contain hundreds or thousands of mitochondria. The PARK6 gene encodes the PINK1 protein, which supports cell survival by detecting damaged mitochondria and tagging them for removal.

In a healthy person, when mitochondria are damaged, PINK1 gathers on mitochondrial membranes and signals through a small protein called ubiquitin, that the broken mitochondria need to be removed. The PINK1 ubiquitin signal is unique to damaged mitochondria, and when PINK1 is mutated in patients, broken mitochondria accumulate in cells.

Although PINK1 has been linked to Parkinson's, and in particular Young Onset Parkinson's Disease, researchers had been unable to visualise it and did not understand how it attaches to mitochondria and is switched on.

Corresponding author on the study and head of WEHI's Ubiquitin Signalling Division, Professor David Komander, said years of work by his team have unlocked the mystery of what human PINK1 looks like, and how it assembles on mitochondria to be switched on.

"This is a significant milestone for research into Parkinson's. It is incredible to finally see PINK1 and understand how it binds to mitochondria," said Prof Komander, who is a laboratory head in the WEHI Parkinson's Disease Research Centre.

"Our structure reveals many new ways to change PINK1, essentially switching it on, which will be life-changing for people with Parkinson's."

Hope for future treatments

Lead author on the study, WEHI senior researcher Dr Sylvie Callegari, said PINK1 works in four distinct steps, with the first two steps not been seen before.

First, PINK1 senses mitochondrial damage. Then it attaches to damaged mitochondria. Once attached it tags ubiquitin, which then links to a protein called Parkin so that the damaged mitochondria can be recycled.

"This is the first time we've seen human PINK1 docked to the surface of damaged mitochondria and it has uncovered a remarkable array of proteins that act as the docking site. We also saw, for the first time, how mutations present in people with Parkinson's disease affect human PINK1," said Dr Callegari.

The idea of using PINK1 as a target for potential drug therapies has long been touted but not yet achieved because the structure of PINK1 and how it attaches to damaged mitochondria were unknown.

The research team hope to use the knowledge to find a drug to slow or stop Parkinson's in people with a PINK1 mutation.

The link between PINK1 and Parkinson's

One of the hallmarks of Parkinson's is the death of brain cells. Around 50 million cells die and are replaced in the human body every minute. But unlike other cells in the body, when brain cells die, the rate at which they are replaced is extremely low.

When mitochondria are damaged, they stop making energy and release toxins into the cell. In a healthy person, the damaged cells are disposed of in a process called mitophagy.

In a person with Parkinson's and a PINK1 mutation the mitophagy process no longer functions correctly and toxins accumulate in the cell, eventually killing it. Brain cells need a lot of energy and are especially sensitive to this damage.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Sylvie Callegari, Nicholas S. Kirk, Zhong Yan Gan, Toby Dite, Simon A. Cobbold, Andrew Leis, Laura F. Dagley, Alisa Glukhova, David Komander. Structure of human PINK1 at a mitochondrial TOM-VDAC array. Science, 2025; DOI: 10.1126/science.adu6445

Cite This Page:

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. "Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson's mystery." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 13 March 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/03/250313151810.htm>.
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. (2025, March 13). Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson's mystery. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 12, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/03/250313151810.htm
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. "Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson's mystery." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/03/250313151810.htm (accessed April 12, 2025).

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