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[Preprint]. 2026 Apr 1:2026.03.30.715195. [Version 1] doi: 10.64898/2026.03.30.715195

Aberrant FICD-mediated AMPylation drives α-Synuclein pathology and overall protein dyshomeostasis in dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson’s disease

Aron Koller, Laura Hoffmann, Alexandra Bluhm, Alina Schweigert, Yanni Schneider, Marie Andert, Tobias Becker, Friederike Zunke, Thomas G Beach, Geidy E Serrano, Steffen Roßner, Jürgen Winkler, Pavel Kielkowski, Wei Xiang
PMCID: PMC13060341  PMID: 41959278

Abstract

Background

Filamentation induced by cAMP domain-containing protein (FICD) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident adenylyltransferase that catalyzes protein AMPylation, a post-translational modification. Although FICD-mediated AMPylation has been linked to the fine-tuning of proteostasis and neuronal integrity, its role in neurodegenerative diseases characterized by protein dyshomeostasis remains unclear. Parkinson’s disease (PD) is defined by dopaminergic neurodegeneration and aggregation of α-synuclein (aSyn) as a consequence of impaired protein homeostasis. We therefore investigated whether dysregulated FICD-mediated AMPylation contributes to PD pathogenesis.

Methods

We combined analyses of human post-mortem PD brain tissue with complementary models, including midbrain dopaminergic neurons derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) of a PD patient carrying an SNCA gene duplication and its isogenic gene dosage-corrected control line, transgenic mouse models of synucleinopathy, and an aSyn-overexpressing H4 neuroglioma cell model. Genetic and pharmacological modulation of FICD activity was integrated with multi-proteomic approaches, including chemical proteomics-based AMPylation profiling, stable isotope labelling with amino acids in cell culture-based global protein turnover analysis, and whole-proteome profiling to identify AMPylation-associated molecular pathways.

Results

FICD was preferentially expressed in dopaminergic neurons and was upregulated in SNCA duplication PD patient-derived neurons, as well as in the basal ganglia of PD post-mortem brains and synucleinopathy mice. Despite this overall increase, the proportion of FICD-expressing dopaminergic neurons was reduced under PD conditions, suggesting selective vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons to FICD. Mechanistically, FICD selectively AMPylated lysosomal proteins, thereby linking AMPylation to the regulation of degradative pathways. Moreover, hyperactivation of FICD-induced AMPylation triggered ER stress, impaired lysosomal function, reduced protein turnover, and ultimately promoted aSyn aggregation and apoptotic cell death. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of AMPylation reversed aSyn pathology and neurite degeneration in PD patient-derived neurons.

Conclusions

We identify the pathological relevance of FICD-mediated AMPylation in PD-related neurodegeneration and its contribution to aSyn aggregation through a bidirectional interplay with aSyn pathology. Our findings support FICD-mediated AMPylation as a defining molecular switch regulating intracellular protein homeostasis in PD and highlight the FICD-AMPylation pathway as a potential therapeutic target for restoring aSyn pathology and mitigating disease progression.

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.


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