Skaper S D
Neurology and GI Centre of Excellence for Drug Discovery, GlaxoSmithKline Research & Development Limited, New Frontiers Science Park, Third Avenue, CM19 5AW Harlow, Essex, UK.
Curr Drug Targets CNS Neurol Disord. 2003 Oct;2(5):279-91. doi: 10.2174/1568007033482733.
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP-1) protects the genome by functioning in the DNA damage surveillance network. In response to stresses that are toxic to the genome, PARP-1 activity increases substantially, an event that appears crucial for maintaining genomic integrity. Massive PARP-1 activation, however, can deplete the cell of NAD(+) and ATP, ultimately leading to energy failure and cell death. The discovery that cell death may be suppressed by PARP inhibitors or by deletion of the parp-1 gene has prompted a great deal of interest in the process of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation. Suppression of PARP-1 is capable of protecting against cerebral and cardiac ischemia, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-induced parkinsonism, traumatic spinal cord injury, and streptozotocin-induced diabetes. The secondary damage of initially surviving neurons in brain stroke accounts for most of the volume of the infarcted area and the subsequent loss of brain function. Microglial migration is strongly controlled in living brain tissue by expression of the integrin CD11a, which is regulated in turn by PARP-1, proposing that PARP-1 downregulation may therefore be a promising strategy in protecting neurons from this secondary damage, as well. As PARP-1 is now recognised as playing a role also in the regulation of gene transcription, this further increases the intricacy of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in the control of cell homeostasis and challenges the notion that energy collapse is the sole mechanism by which poly(ADP-ribose) formation contributes to cell death. PARP(s) might regulate cell fate as essential modulators of death and survival transcriptional programs with relation to NF-kappaB and p53, proposing that inhibitors of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation could therefore prevent the deleterious consequences of neuroinflammation by reducing NF-kappaB activity.
聚(ADP - 核糖)聚合酶1(PARP - 1)通过在DNA损伤监测网络中发挥作用来保护基因组。响应于对基因组有毒性的应激,PARP - 1活性大幅增加,这一事件对于维持基因组完整性似乎至关重要。然而,大量的PARP - 1激活会耗尽细胞内的NAD(+)和ATP,最终导致能量衰竭和细胞死亡。PARP抑制剂或parp - 1基因缺失可抑制细胞死亡这一发现,引发了人们对聚(ADP - 核糖基)化过程的极大兴趣。抑制PARP - 1能够预防脑和心脏缺血、1 - 甲基 - 4 - 苯基 - 1,2,3,6 - 四氢吡啶诱导的帕金森症、创伤性脊髓损伤以及链脲佐菌素诱导的糖尿病。脑卒中后最初存活神经元的继发性损伤占梗死区域大部分体积,并导致随后的脑功能丧失。在活脑组织中,小胶质细胞迁移受到整合素CD11a表达的强烈调控,而CD11a又受PARP - 1调控,这表明下调PARP - 1可能也是保护神经元免受这种继发性损伤的一种有前景的策略。由于PARP - 1现在也被认为在基因转录调控中发挥作用,这进一步增加了聚(ADP - 核糖基)化在细胞稳态控制中的复杂性,并挑战了能量衰竭是聚(ADP - 核糖)形成导致细胞死亡的唯一机制这一观念。PARP可能作为与NF - κB和p53相关的死亡和存活转录程序的关键调节因子来调控细胞命运,这表明聚(ADP - 核糖基)化抑制剂因此可以通过降低NF - κB活性来预防神经炎症的有害后果。