“Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase Downregulation in Dopaminergic Neurons Induces Presynaptic Dysfunction and Neuronal Vulnerability In Vivo and In Vitro”

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Abstract

Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase (PMCA) is essential for maintaining intracellular calcium homeostasis. Previously, we used constitutive PMCA downregulation in Drosophila melanogaster dopaminergic neurons as a model to increase intracellular calcium and mimic early neuronal alterations associated with Parkinson’s disease. Here, we examined the mechanisms underlying the effects mediated by the conditional, adult-specific downregulation of PMCA in dopaminergic neurons in Drosophila melanogaster , both in vivo and in primary neuronal cultures. Adult-specific conditional silencing of PMCA in dopaminergic neurons reduced lifespan but to a lesser extent than the constitutive model and impaired locomotor performance. At the cellular level, PMCA-downregulated dopaminergic neurons exhibited elevated basal calcium, indicating disrupted calcium regulation. This was associated with a progressive increase in presynaptic vesicles and extracellular dopamine levels, suggesting enhanced neurotransmitter release. Notably, the synaptic active zone structure was preserved, indicating primarily functional rather than structural alterations. In primary neuronal cultures, PMCA downregulation reduced dopaminergic neuron survival and induced transient increases in neurite branching. Together, these findings show that PMCA downregulation leads to calcium dysregulation and presynaptic dysfunction without overt neurodegeneration in vivo, while promoting premature neuronal death in culture, indicating increased vulnerability and supporting a pre-degenerative state in which synaptic alterations precede neuronal loss.

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