Researchers at The Ottawa Hospital and 91ÌÒÉ« recently made a major contribution to this debate with their study showing that parkin acts like a powerful antioxidant that .
Their follow-up study, published in , reveals that parkinâs antioxidant activity involves glutathione â a natural substance produced in almost all cells.
Using animal, cell and biochemical models, the team showed that parkin could recycle a âused-up formâ of glutathione into a helpful antioxidant version. In parkinâs absence, cells try to produce more of the antioxidant version of glutathione, but that doesnât replace all of parkinâs protective effects.
The results could lead to new treatments for Parkinsonâs disease, as well as innovative glutathione-based approaches to monitor disease progression.
âSeeing this extensive body of work come to fruition only reinvigorates my passion for Parkinson disease research and encourages me to keep contributing to the field, on behalf of all PD patients and their families,â said lead author Dr. Daniel El Kodsi, former postdoctoral fellow at The Ottawa Hospital and currently Research Scientist and Program Manager at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. âUnder the mentorship of Dr. Michael G. Schlossmacher I learned a lot and cultivated many skills, but most of all I was inspired to not be afraid to challenge the field in the pursuit of the truth in science.â
Authors:
, Tokarew JM, Sengupta R, Lengacher NA, Chatterji A, Nguyen AP, Boston H, Jiang Q, Palmberg C, Pileggi C, Holterman CE, Shutinoski B, Li J, Fehr TK, LaVoie MJ, Ratan RR, Shaw GS, Takanashi M, Hattori N, Kennedy CR, Harper ME, Holmgren A, and co-corresponding authors and .