Brooks P J, Cheng Tsu-Fan, Cooper Lori
Section on Molecular Neurobiology, Laboratory of Neurogenetics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, 5625 Fishers Lane, Room 3S32, Rockville, MD 20852, USA.
DNA Repair (Amst). 2008 Jun 1;7(6):834-48. doi: 10.1016/j.dnarep.2008.01.017. Epub 2008 Mar 12.
The classic model for neurodegeneration due to mutations in DNA repair genes holds that DNA damage accumulates in the absence of repair, resulting in the death of neurons. This model was originally put forth to explain the dramatic loss of neurons observed in patients with xeroderma pigmentosum neurologic disease, and is likely to be valid for other neurodegenerative diseases due to mutations in DNA repair genes. However, in trichiothiodystrophy (TTD), Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS), and Cockayne syndrome (CS), abnormal myelin is the most prominent neuropathological feature. Myelin is synthesized by specific types of glial cells called oligodendrocytes. In this review, we focus on new studies that illustrate two disease mechanisms for myelin defects resulting from mutations in DNA repair genes, both of which are fundamentally different than the classic model described above. First, studies using the TTD mouse model indicate that TFIIH acts as a co-activator for thyroid hormone-dependent gene expression in the brain, and that a causative XPD mutation in TTD results in reduction of this co-activator function and a dysregulation of myelin-related gene expression. Second, in AGS, which is caused by mutations in either TREX1 or RNASEH2, recent evidence indicates that failure to degrade nucleic acids produced during S-phase triggers activation of the innate immune system, resulting in myelin defects and calcification of the brain. Strikingly, both myelin defects and brain calcification are both prominent features of CS neurologic disease. The similar neuropathology in CS and AGS seems unlikely to be due to the loss of a common DNA repair function, and based on the evidence in the literature, we propose that vascular abnormalities may be part of the mechanism that is common to both diseases. In summary, while the classic DNA damage accumulation model is applicable to the neuronal death due to defective DNA repair, the myelination defects and brain calcification seem to be better explained by quite different mechanisms. We discuss the implications of these different disease mechanisms for the rational development of treatments and therapies.
DNA修复基因突变导致神经退行性变的经典模型认为,在缺乏修复的情况下,DNA损伤会不断累积,最终导致神经元死亡。该模型最初是为了解释色素性干皮病神经病变患者中观察到的神经元大量丧失现象,并且可能适用于其他由DNA修复基因突变引起的神经退行性疾病。然而,在毛发硫营养不良(TTD)、艾卡迪-古铁雷斯综合征(AGS)和科凯恩综合征(CS)中,异常髓鞘是最突出的神经病理学特征。髓鞘由一种名为少突胶质细胞的特定类型的神经胶质细胞合成。在本综述中,我们重点关注一些新研究,这些研究阐明了DNA修复基因突变导致髓鞘缺陷的两种疾病机制,这两种机制与上述经典模型有着根本的不同。首先,使用TTD小鼠模型的研究表明,转录因子IIH(TFIIH)在大脑中作为甲状腺激素依赖性基因表达的共激活因子发挥作用,并且TTD中致病性的XPD突变会导致这种共激活因子功能的降低以及髓鞘相关基因表达的失调。其次,在由TREX1或RNASEH2突变引起的AGS中,最近的证据表明,未能降解S期产生的核酸会触发先天免疫系统的激活,从而导致髓鞘缺陷和大脑钙化。引人注目的是,髓鞘缺陷和大脑钙化都是CS神经疾病的突出特征。CS和AGS中相似的神经病理学表现似乎不太可能是由于共同的DNA修复功能丧失所致,基于文献中的证据,我们提出血管异常可能是这两种疾病共有的机制的一部分。总之,虽然经典的DNA损伤累积模型适用于因DNA修复缺陷导致的神经元死亡,但髓鞘形成缺陷和大脑钙化似乎可以通过截然不同的机制得到更好的解释。我们讨论了这些不同疾病机制对合理开发治疗方法和疗法的意义。