Department of Neuology, Hematology, Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Diabetology, Yamagata University Faculty of Medicine, 2-2-2 Iida-nishi, Yamagata 990-9585, Japan.
Curr Pharm Biotechnol. 2010 Feb;11(2):158-66. doi: 10.2174/138920110790909713.
The most characteristic feature of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Huntington's disease, is the occurrence of extra- or intracellular fibrillar aggregates containing misfolded proteins with beta-sheet conformation. These aggregates are composed of distinct proteins in each neurodegenerative disease. However, mutations in genes encoding major constituents of aggregates, such as Abeta, tau, alpha-synuclein, SOD1 and huntingtin, have been identified to causally associate with familial forms of the diseases. Biochemical studies demonstrate that these mutant and some wild-type proteins tend to be misfolded or form aggregates. It has been proposed that these diseases are caused by a common mechanism involving misfolded proteins that trigger a toxic cascade leading to neuronal degeneration. This hypothesis is the basis of the therapeutic potential of heat shock proteins (HSPs), which prevent protein misfolding and aggregation. Transgenic animal models of the diseases have demonstrated that induction or overexpression of HSPs can suppress neuronal dysfunction and degeneration. Do the results promise clinical success for HSP-based therapy in neurodegenerative diseases? Recent findings regarding the pathogenic species generated during fibril formation have highlighted some of the beneficial and problematic aspects of HSP-based therapy. In this review, we focus on the pathogenic role of prefibrillar intermediates, including soluble oligomers and protofibrils, on neurodegeneration, and the relationship between prefibrillar intermediates and the proteins targeted by HSPs. We discuss in vitro and in vivo experimental data showing that HSPs counteract disease progression by acting as suppressors of toxic prefibrillar intermediates and toxic misfolded proteins in neurodegenerative diseases.
神经退行性疾病(包括阿尔茨海默病、帕金森病、肌萎缩侧索硬化症和亨廷顿病)最典型的特征是发生含有错误折叠蛋白的细胞外或细胞内纤维状聚集物。这些聚集物由每种神经退行性疾病中不同的蛋白质组成。然而,已经发现编码聚集物主要成分(如 Abeta、tau、alpha-synuclein、SOD1 和 huntingtin)的基因突变与疾病的家族形式有因果关系。生化研究表明,这些突变和一些野生型蛋白容易发生错误折叠或形成聚集物。有人提出,这些疾病是由涉及错误折叠蛋白的共同机制引起的,这些错误折叠蛋白触发毒性级联反应,导致神经元变性。这一假说是热休克蛋白(HSPs)治疗潜力的基础,HSPs 可防止蛋白质错误折叠和聚集。这些疾病的转基因动物模型表明,诱导或过表达 HSPs 可以抑制神经元功能障碍和变性。HSP 为基础的治疗在神经退行性疾病中是否有临床成功的希望?关于纤维形成过程中产生的致病物种的最新发现,突出了 HSP 为基础的治疗的一些有益和有问题的方面。在这篇综述中,我们重点讨论了前纤维中间体(包括可溶性寡聚物和原纤维)在神经变性中的致病作用,以及前纤维中间体与 HSP 靶向的蛋白质之间的关系。我们讨论了体外和体内实验数据,这些数据表明 HSP 通过作为神经退行性疾病中有毒前纤维中间体和有毒错误折叠蛋白的抑制剂来对抗疾病进展。