Phosphoglycerate kinase is a central leverage point in Parkinson's disease-driven neuronal metabolic deficits.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Kokotos A, Antoniazzi A, Unda S, Ko M, Park D, Eliezer D, Kaplitt M, De Camilli P, Ryan T
Journal Sci Adv
Volume 10
Issue 34
Pagination eadn6016
Date Published 08/21/2024
ISSN 2375-2548
Keywords Phosphoglycerate Kinase, Parkinson Disease, Neurons
Abstract Although certain drivers of familial Parkinson's disease (PD) compromise mitochondrial integrity, whether metabolic deficits underly other idiopathic or genetic origins of PD is unclear. Here, we demonstrate that phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (PGK1), a gene in the PARK12 susceptibility locus, is rate limiting in neuronal glycolysis and that modestly increasing PGK1 expression boosts neuronal adenosine 5'-triphosphate production kinetics that is sufficient to suppress PARK20-driven synaptic dysfunction. We found that this activity enhancement depends on the molecular chaperone PARK7/DJ-1, whose loss of function significantly disrupts axonal bioenergetics. In vivo, viral expression of PGK1 confers protection of striatal dopamine axons against metabolic lesions. These data support the notion that bioenergetic deficits may underpin PD-associated pathologies and point to improving neuronal adenosine 5'-triphosphate production kinetics as a promising path forward in PD therapeutics.
DOI 10.1126/sciadv.adn6016
PubMed ID 39167658
PubMed Central ID PMC11338267
Back to Top