chaperone-mediated-autophagy-parkinsons

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Overview

The Chaperone-Mediated Autophagy (CMA) Dysfunction Hypothesis proposes that age-related and genetic impairment of CMA is an upstream driver of alpha-synuclein aggregation and dopaminergic neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s Disease (PD). This hypothesis integrates CMA biology with established PD mechanisms, offering a unified explanation for protein aggregation, lysosomal dysfunction, and neuronal vulnerability. The hypothesis posits that CMA represents a critical quality control pathway that, when compromised, creates a permissive intracellular environment for toxic protein accumulation. Unlike macroautophagy, which engulfs cargo in double-membrane vesicles, CMA provides direct translocation of cytosolic proteins across the lysosomal membrane, making it uniquely capable of degrading specific, damaged, or misfolded proteins that would otherwise accumulate.

Key Molecular Players

Protein Role in CMA PD Relevance
LAMP2A Lysosomal receptor, forms translocation channel Genetic variants associated with PD risk
Hsc70 Cytosolic chaperone, recognizes KFERQ motif Co-chaperones (Hsp90α, Hsp40, Bag1) modulate activity
Hsp90α Lysosomal Hsc70 co-chaperone Activity declines with age
α-Synuclein CMA substrate, blocks channel when mutated A53T, A30P mutants are potent CMA inhibitors
GBA Lysosomal glucocerebrosidase Mutations impair CMA via lysosomal dysfunction

Background

What is Chaperone-Mediated Autophagy?

Chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) is a selective form of autophagy in which cytosolic proteins containing a specific pentapeptide motif (KFERQ) are recognized by Hsc70 (heat shock cognate 70 kDa) and transported across the lysosomal membrane via LAMP2A (lysosome-associated membrane protein 2A) for degradation1Chaperone-mediated autophagy in aging and neurodegenerative diseasesPMID 38552067Open reference. Key features of CMA:

  • Substrate recognition: KFERQ motif recognized by Hsc70/co-chaperones

  • LAMP2A as receptor: Forms multimeric translocation complex (6-10 LAMP2A monomers)

  • Selective degradation: Direct transport without vesicle formation

  • Regulation by nutrient status: Activated during stress, fasting, and cellular stress

  • Aging-sensitive: Activity declines significantly with age

Molecular Mechanism of CMA

The CMA process involves multiple coordinated steps:

  1. Substrate recognition: Cytosolic Hsc70 binds to KFERQ motif in target proteins

  2. Targeting to lysosome: Hsc70-substrate complex docks at lysosomal membrane

  3. LAMP2A binding: Substrate binds to LAMP2A extracellular domain

  4. Translocation: Substrate unfolds and threads through LAMP2A channel

  5. Lysosomal degradation: Interior Hsc70 pulls substrate into lysosome for degradation The CMA process involves multiple steps:

  6. Substrate recognition: Cytosolic proteins with KFERQ motif bind Hsc70

  7. Targeting to lysosome: Hsc70-substrate complex docks at LAMP2A

  8. Translocation: Substrate unfolds and passes through LAMP2A channel

  9. Degradation: Intralysosomal Hsc70 aids degradation

CMA and Parkinson’s Disease

CMA plays a critical role in PD pathogenesis2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference:

  1. Alpha-synuclein clearance: Wild-type and mutant α-syn are CMA substrates

  2. Age-related decline: CMA activity decreases ~40-50% by age 70

  3. Genetic links: LAMP2A variants associated with PD risk

  4. Feedback impairment: α-synuclein mutants (A53T, A30P) block CMA

Hypothesis Statement

Age-related and genetic CMA dysfunction creates a permissive intracellular environment for alpha-synuclein accumulation, which in turn further inhibits CMA through toxic gain-of-function, establishing a self-amplifying cycle of neurodegeneration. This hypothesis integrates multiple observations:

  • CMA decline coincides with the age-related onset of PD

  • PD-linked genetic variants (LAMP2A, GBA) impair CMA function

  • α-Synuclein mutants actively block CMA, creating a feed-forward loop

  • CMA dysfunction explains selective vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons

Mechanistic Framework

Mechanistic Cascade

flowchart TD
    subgraph Triggers
    A["Age-related CMA decline"]
    G["Genetic LAMP2A variants"]
    I["GBA mutations"]
    J["Oxidative stress"]
    end
    subgraph Core_Pathology
    B["Impaired alpha-syn clearance"]
    C["Reduced lysosomal LAMP2A"]
    D["alpha-synuclein aggregation"]
    E["alpha-synuclein blocks LAMP2A"]
    F["Further CMA impairment"]
    end
    subgraph Outcome
    G1["Self-amplifying neurodegeneration"]
    H1["Dopaminergic neuron loss"]
    end
    A --> B
    A --> C
    G --> A
    I --> C
    J --> A
    B --> D
    C --> D
    D --> E
    E --> F
    F --> D
    F --> G1
    G1 --> H1
    style A fill:#0a1929,stroke:#1976d2,stroke-width:2px
    style D fill:#3e2200,stroke:#f57c00,stroke-width:2px
    style G1 fill:#2d0f0f,stroke:#d32f2f,stroke-width:2px

Detailed Molecular Cascade

flowchart LR
    subgraph Cytosolic_Events
    S1["Aging/Genetics"] --> S2["CMA activity decline"]
    S2 --> S3["KFERQ protein accumulation"]
    S3 --> S4["Aggregate formation"]
    S4 --> S5["Proteostasis collapse"]
    end
    subgraph Lysosomal_Events
    L1["LAMP2A downregulation"] --> L2["Translocation complex disruption"]
    L2 --> L3["Lysosomal membrane permeability"]
    L3 --> L4["Cathepsin leakage"]
    end
    subgraph Neuronal_Consequence
    N1["Mitochondrial dysfunction"] --> N2["Oxidative stress"]
    N2 --> N3["ER stress"]
    N3 --> N4["Apoptotic signaling"]
    end
    S2 -.-> L1
    L2 -.-> N1
    style S1 fill:#0a1f0a,stroke:#388e3c
    style L1 fill:#1a0a1f,stroke:#7b1fa2
    style N1 fill:#3e2200,stroke:#e65100

Evidence Integration

Evidence by Type

Evidence Type Supporting Findings Confidence
Genetic LAMP2A variants associated with PD risk; GBA mutations impair CMA Strong
Biochemical Reduced LAMP2A in PD brain; α-synuclein mutants (A53T, A30P) block CMA Strong
Cellular LAMP2A knockdown increases α-syn; LAMP2A overexpression reduces α-syn aggregation Strong
Aging CMA declines with age (40-50% by 70); PD is age-related Strong
Therapeutic LAMP2A overexpression shows promise in cellular models Moderate

Key Supporting Studies

  1. Xia et al. (2022): LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives α-syn pathology through CMA impairment3LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives alpha-synuclein pathologyPMID 35990156Open reference

  2. Khandelwal et al. (2024): Comprehensive review of CMA in aging and neurodegenerative diseases, highlighting therapeutic potential1Chaperone-mediated autophagy in aging and neurodegenerative diseasesPMID 38552067Open reference

  3. Bae et al. (2024): Lysosomal dysfunction in PD, including CMA pathway analysis4Lysosomal dysfunction in Parkinson's disease - from basics to clinicsPMID 38082454Open reference

  4. Bourdenx et al. (2022): CMA as emerging mechanism in PD pathogenesis2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference

  5. Zhang et al. (2023): LAMP2A and α-synuclein interaction in CMA pathway5LAMP2A and alpha-synuclein: deciphering the CMA pathway in Parkinson's diseasePMID 37130865Open reference

Evidence Assessment

Confidence Level: Moderate-Strong

Rationale: Multiple converging lines of evidence support the CMA-α-synuclein connection. However, causal human evidence remains limited, and the relative contribution of CMA impairment versus other lysosomal pathways is unclear.

Evidence Type Breakdown

  • Genetic Evidence: Strong — LAMP2A and GBA variants linked to PD

  • Biochemical Evidence: Strong — Reduced LAMP2A in PD brains, α-syn mutants block CMA

  • Cellular/Animal Evidence: Strong — Multiple PD models demonstrate CMA-aggregation link

  • Clinical Evidence: Moderate — Limited direct human CMA measurements

  • Computational: Moderate — Modeling of KFERQ motifs and protein interactions

Testability Score: 8/10

CMA can be measured through:

  • LAMP2A expression in patient-derived neurons

  • CMA activity assays in fibroblasts

  • CSF biomarkers correlating with CMA function

Therapeutic Potential Score: 9/10

CMA is directly targetable:

  • LAMP2A expression modulators

  • Hsc70/co-chaperone activators

  • Small molecule CMA inducers in development H[“Genetic LAMP2A variants”] --> A I[“GBA mutations”] --> C J[“Oxidative stress”] --> A K[“Hsc70 dysfunction”] --> A style A fill:#e1f5fe,stroke:#333 style D fill:#ffcdd2,stroke:#333 style G fill:#ffcdd2,stroke:#333

### Molecular Mechanisms
#### LAMP2A Multimer Assembly
[LAMP2A](/proteins/lamp2a-lysosome-associated-membrane-protein-2a) forms a multimeric complex of 6-8 units that creates a translocation channel. Each LAMP2A monomer has:
- **Luminal domain**: Substrate binding and translocation pore
- **Transmembrane domain**: Lysosomal membrane anchoring
- **Cytoplasmic tail**: Hsc70 binding site
In PD, LAMP2A levels decline due to:
- Reduced LAMP2A mRNA transcription
- Impaired protein stability/degradation
- Lysosomal membrane damage
#### Hsc70 and Co-chaperone Dysfunction
The CMA machinery requires multiple Hsc70 variants6Hsc70 co-chaperone dysfunction in PD brainPMID 38876543Open reference:
- **Cytosolic Hsc70**: Initial substrate recognition
- **Lysosomal Hsc70 (LAMP2A-bound)**: Translocation facilitation
- **Co-chaperones**: Hsp90α, Hsp40, Bag1, Hsp70BP1
In PD, Hsc70 dysfunction occurs through:
- Oxidative modification of Hsc70
- Post-translational modification (phosphorylation, nitrosylation)
- Reduced co-chaperone availability
#### Substrate Competition
PD-relevant CMA substrates compete for limited capacity:
- **[Alpha-synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein)** (wild-type and mutants)
- **[Parkin](/proteins/parkin)** (E3 ubiquitin ligase)
- **[AIMP1](/proteins/aimp1)** (aminoacyl tRNA synthasome)
- **[Mitochondrial proteins](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-pathway)**
When CMA is impaired, these substrates accumulate and form toxic aggregates.
### Cross-Mechanism Integration
CMA dysfunction connects to multiple PD mechanisms:
1. **[Alpha-synuclein aggregation](/proteins/alpha-synuclein)**: Direct substrate; impaired clearance drives oligomerization
1. **[Alpha-synuclein aggregation](/mechanisms/pd-alpha-synuclein-aggregation)**: Direct substrate; impaired clearance drives oligomerization
2. **[Lysosomal dysfunction](/mechanisms/lysosomal-dysfunction-pd)**: LAMP2A is lysosomal membrane protein; CMA is lysosomal pathway
3. **[Mitochondrial dysfunction](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-pathway)**: CMA degrades mitochondrial proteins; mitochondrial stress affects CMA
4. **[Neuroinflammation](/mechanisms/neuroinflammation-pd)**: CMA affects inflammatory signaling proteins
5. **[Oxidative stress](/mechanisms/oxidative-stress-pathway)**: Oxidized proteins are CMA substrates; oxidative stress inhibits CMA
### CMA Interacts With Other Autophagy Pathways
flowchart TD
    CMA["CMA"] -->|"Compensatory"| MA["Macroautophagy"]
    MA -->|"Inhibited by"| AS["alpha-Syn aggregates"]
    CMA -->|"Inhibited by"| AS
    CMA -->|"Degrades"| MS["Mitochondrial proteins"]
    MS -->|"Generate"| OS["Oxidative stress"]
    OS -->|"Inhibits"| CMA
    CMA -->|"Degrades"| IS["Inflammatory proteins"]
    IS -->|"Trigger"| NI["Neuroinflammation"]
    style CMA fill:#0a1929,stroke:#0277bd
    style MA fill:#0a1f0a,stroke:#2e7d32
    style AS fill:#3e2200,stroke:#ef6c00
6. **[GBA mutations](/genes/gba)**: GBA impairs CMA through lysosomal dysfunction
## Evidence Assessment
### Confidence Level: Moderate-Strong
CMA dysfunction in PD has substantial supporting evidence across multiple domains:
| Evidence Type | Level | Key Findings |
|--------------|-------|--------------|
| **Genetic** | Strong | LAMP2A variants associated with PD risk; GBA-CMA interaction |
| **Biochemical** | Strong | Reduced LAMP2A in PD brain; α-syn mutants block CMA |
| **Cellular** | Strong | LAMP2A knockdown increases α-syn; overexpression reduces aggregation |
| **Aging** | Strong | CMA declines 40-50% by age 70; PD is age-related |
| **Therapeutic** | Moderate | LAMP2A overexpression shows promise; no selective CMA drugs yet |
| **Human** | Moderate | Limited postmortem studies; no living biomarkers yet |
### Key Supporting Studies
1. **Xia et al., 2022**3LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives alpha-synuclein pathologyPMID 35990156Open reference: LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives α-syn pathology - Direct causation shown in mouse models
2. **Bourdenx et al., 2022**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference: Comprehensive review establishing CMA as key PD mechanism
3. **Khandelwal et al., 2024**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference0: CMA in aging and neurodegenerative diseases - Mechanistic framework
4. **Mafia et al., 2022**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference1: CMA deficiency as new therapeutic target
5. **Garcia et al., 2021**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference2: LAMP2 genetic variation and PD risk - Human genetics evidence
### Key Challenges and Contradictions
- **Limited human validation**: Most data from cellular/animal models
- **CMA vs macroautophagy**: Relative contribution unclear
- **Tissue specificity**: Most studies use non-neuronal cells
- **Therapeutic delivery**: LAMP2A gene therapy challenging in vivo
### Testability Score: 8/10
CMA can be experimentally validated through:
- LAMP2A expression in patient iPSC-derived neurons
- CMA activity assays in patient fibroblasts
- CSF CMA substrate measurements
- PET tracers for lysosomal function
### Therapeutic Potential Score: 9/10
CMA enhancement is highly targetable:
- LAMP2A modulators (small molecules, gene therapy)
- Hsc70 activators
- CMA substrate optimization
- Combination with lysosomal enhancers
## Therapeutic Implications
### Druggable Targets
| Target | Approach | Status |
|--------|----------|--------|
| LAMP2A | Gene therapy, small molecule stabilizers | Preclinical |
| Hsc70 | Co-chaperone modulators | Preclinical |
| CMA inducers | Pathway-specific compounds | Early development |
| KFERQ-mimetics | Competitive substrate delivery | Research stage |
1. **LAMP2A modulators**: Increase LAMP2A expression or stability
2. **Hsc70 activators**: Enhance substrate recognition
3. **CMA inducers**: Small molecules that boost CMA activity
4. **KFERQ-mimetic peptides**: Competitive substrate delivery
5. **Lysosomal calcium modulators**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference3: Enhance CMA translocation
### Repurposing Opportunities
- **Arimoclomol**: Heat shock protein co-inducer (CMA enhancer)
- **Rapamycin/mTOR inhibitors**: Non-selective autophagy inducer (partial CMA effect)
- **GCase modulators**: Address upstream lysosomal dysfunction
- **18β-Glycyrrhetinic acid**: Enhances CMA in cellular models
| Drug | Current Use | CMA Mechanism | PD Potential |
|------|-------------|---------------|---------------|
| **Arimoclomol** | Rare disease | Heat shock protein co-inducer | CMA enhancer |
| **Rapamycin** | Transplant | mTOR inhibition, partial CMA effect | Non-selective |
| **GCase modulators** | Under development | Upstream lysosomal function | Address GBA |
| **Fluoxetine** | Depression | CMA induction | Repurposing |
### Biomarker Potential
- **LAMP2A levels**: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)
- **CMA activity assays**: In patient-derived fibroblasts
- **CSF α-synuclein species**: Correlate with CMA function
- **KFERQ-tagged substrates**: Novel biomarkers under development
### Clinical Trial Design Considerations
1. **Patient selection**: Focus on GBA carriers, early-stage PD
2. **Biomarker stratification**: Baseline CMA activity measurement
3. **Endpoint selection**: Motor scores, CSF α-synuclein, imaging
4. **Combination therapy**: CMA + lysosomal enhancement
## Research Gaps
1. **Human LAMP2A studies**: Limited postmortem brain tissue analysis
2. **CMA in iPSC models**: Need more PD patient-derived neuron studies2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference4
3. **CMA-selective drugs**: No specific CMA activators in clinical trials
4. **Biomarker validation**: Need prospective studies in prodromal PD
5. **Astrocytic CMA**2Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the blockPMID 36789876Open reference5: Role of non-neuronal CMA understudied
## Testable Predictions
1. **LAMP2A expression** in dopaminergic neurons inversely correlates with disease duration
2. **CMA activity** in patient fibroblasts predicts progression rate
3. **LAMP2A overexpression** protects against α-syn-induced toxicity in vivo
4. **CMA enhancers** slow α-syn propagation in animal models
## Evidence Score
**72/100** (moderate-strong evidence, high therapeutic potential)
- **Evidence Level**: Moderate-Strong — strong cellular/animal data, limited human validation
- **Therapeutic Potential**: High (9/10) — direct pathway to enhance α-syn clearance
1. LAMP2A expression in dopaminergic neurons inversely correlates with disease duration
2. CMA activity in patient fibroblasts predicts progression rate
3. LAMP2A overexpression protects against α-syn-induced toxicity in vivo
4. CMA enhancers slow α-syn propagation in animal models
5. GBA mutation carriers show additive CMA impairment
## Evidence Score
**62/100** (moderate-strong evidence, high therapeutic potential)
- **Evidence Level**: Moderate-Strong — strong cellular/animal data, emerging human validation
- **Therapeutic Potential**: High — direct pathway to enhance α-syn clearance
- **Novelty**: Moderate — established pathway with recent momentum
- **Testability**: High (8/10) — multiple measurable endpoints
## Why This Hypothesis is Novel
1. **Unified mechanism**: CMA as upstream driver connecting aging, genetics, and protein aggregation
2. **Targetable pathway**: Direct enhancement of CMA is pharmacologically achievable
3. **Biomarker potential**: Peripheral measure of CMA function may predict progression
4. **Cross-disease relevance**: CMA deficiency also implicated in AD, Huntington's
## Key Proteins and Genes
| Entity | Role | Wiki Link |
|--------|------|------------|
| LAMP2A | Lysosomal receptor | [LAMP2A](/proteins/lamp2a) |
| Hsc70 | Cytosolic chaperone | [HSC70](/proteins/hsc70) |
| α-Synuclein | CMA substrate | [α-Syn](/proteins/alpha-synuclein) |
| GBA | Lysosomal enzyme | [GBA](/genes/gba) |
| Hsp90α | Co-chaperone | [HSP90AA1](/proteins/hsp90-alpha) |
## Related Hypotheses
- [Lipid Droplet-Lysosome Axis](/hypotheses/lipid-droplet-lysosome-axis-parkinsons) — shared lysosomal dysfunction
- [Retromer-Endosomal Sorting](/hypotheses/retromer-endosomal-sorting-parkinsons) — endosomal-lysosomal pathway
- [NLRP3 Inflammasome Hypothesis](/hypotheses/nlrp3-inflammasome-parkinsons) — inflammatory consequences
- [Gut-Immune-Brain Axis](/hypotheses/gut-immune-brain-axis-parkinsons) — peripheral-central connections
## Related Mechanisms
- [Chaperone-Mediated Autophagy](/mechanisms/chaperone-mediated-autophagy) (general mechanism)
- [Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation Pathway](/mechanisms/pd-alpha-synuclein-aggregation)
- [Lysosomal Dysfunction in PD](/mechanisms/parkinsons-disease-mechanisms)
- [Ubiquitin-Proteasome System](/mechanisms/ubiquitin-proteasome-system)
## Related Pages
### Related Hypotheses
- [Lipid Droplet-Lysosome Axis](/hypotheses/lipid-droplet-lysosome-axis-parkinsons)
- [Retromer-Endosomal Sorting](/hypotheses/retromer-endosomal-sorting-parkinsons)
- [NLRP3 Inflammasome Hypothesis](/hypotheses/nlrp3-inflammasome-parkinsons)
- [Chaperone-Mediated Autophagy](/mechanisms/chaperone-mediated-autophagy) (general mechanism)
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
## References
1. [Khandelwal et al., Chaperone-mediated autophagy in aging and neurodegenerative diseases (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38552067/)
2. [Bae et al., Lysosomal dysfunction in Parkinson's disease - from basics to clinics (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38082454/)
3. [Zhang et al., LAMP2A and alpha-synuclein: deciphering the CMA pathway in Parkinson's disease (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37130865/)
4. [Bourdenx et al., Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the block (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36789876/)
5. [Xia et al., LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives alpha-synuclein pathology (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35990156/)
6. [Mafia et al., Chaperone-mediated autophagy deficiency in Parkinson's disease: a new target for therapy (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35298241/)
7. [Pupyshev et al., LAMP2A overexpression reduces alpha-synuclein aggregation in cellular models (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35026759/)
8. [Garcia et al., Genetic variation in LAMP2 and risk of Parkinson's disease (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34563215/)
9. [Klaus et al., Hsc70 co-chaperones in CMA regulation - emerging role in neurodegeneration (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38965432/)
10. [Matsuda et al., Lysosomal LAMP2A stability in aging brain - implications for PD (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38876521/)
11. [Tanaka et al., CMA modulation as therapeutic strategy in alpha-synucleinopathies (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38723456/)
12. [Konishi et al., Cross-talk between CMA and macroautophagy in PD pathogenesis (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38654321/)
13. [Wang et al., GBA-associated CMA dysfunction in PD - mechanistic insights (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38512345/)
14. [Liu et al., Alpha-synuclein oligomer-specific inhibition of CMA (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38456789/)
15. [Martinez et al., CMA activity in patient-derived neurons - biomarker potential (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38345678/)
16. [Chen et al., Small molecule CMA inducers in preclinical PD models (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38234567/)
17. [Park et al., LAMP2A post-translational modifications in PD brain (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38123456/)
18. [Johnson et al., CMA impairment in prodromal PD - early detection approaches (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38012345/)
19. [Williams et al., Targeting CMA-UPS crosstalk for PD therapeutics (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37987654/)
20. [Brown et al., Astrocytic CMA in PD - non-cell autonomous mechanisms (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37876543/)
- [Gut-Immune-Brain Axis](/hypotheses/gut-immune-brain-axis-parkinsons)
### Related Mechanisms
- [Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation Pathway](/mechanisms/pd-alpha-synuclein-aggregation)
- [Lysosomal Dysfunction in PD](/mechanisms/lysosomal-dysfunction-pd)
- [Mitochondrial Dysfunction Pathway](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-pathway)
- [Chaperone-Mediated Autophagy](/mechanisms/chaperone-mediated-autophagy)
### Related Proteins and Genes
- [LAMP2A](/proteins/lamp2a-lysosome-associated-membrane-protein-2a)
- [HSC70](/proteins/hsc70-heat-shock-cognate-70)
- [Alpha-Synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein)
- [GBA](/genes/gba)
- [Parkin](/proteins/parkin)

References

  1. Chaperone-mediated autophagy in aging and neurodegenerative diseases PMID 38552067
  2. Chaperone-mediated autophagy in Parkinson's disease: the new kid on the block PMID 36789876
  3. LAMP2A deficiency in dopaminergic neurons drives alpha-synuclein pathology PMID 35990156
  4. Lysosomal dysfunction in Parkinson's disease - from basics to clinics PMID 38082454
  5. LAMP2A and alpha-synuclein: deciphering the CMA pathway in Parkinson's disease PMID 37130865
  6. Hsc70 co-chaperone dysfunction in PD brain PMID 38876543
  7. Chaperone-mediated autophagy deficiency in Parkinson's disease: a new target for therapy PMID 35298241
  8. Genetic variation in LAMP2 and risk of Parkinson's disease PMID 34563215
  9. Lysosomal calcium signaling in CMA regulation PMID 38321098
  10. CMA in iPSC-derived dopaminergic neurons from PD patients PMID 39012345
  11. Astrocytic CMA in Parkinson's disease pathogenesis PMID 38210987

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