Boison Detlev, Aronica Eleonora
Robert Stone Dow Neurobiology Laboratories, Legacy Research Institute, Portland, OR 97232, USA.
Department of (Neuro)Pathology, Academic Medical Center and Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, Center for Neuroscience, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Stichting Epilepsie Instellingen (SEIN) Nederland, Heemstede, The Netherlands.
Neuropharmacology. 2015 Oct;97:18-34. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2015.04.031. Epub 2015 May 13.
Comorbidities in Neurology represent a major conceptual and therapeutic challenge. For example, temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is a syndrome comprised of epileptic seizures and comorbid symptoms including memory and psychiatric impairment, depression, and sleep dysfunction. Similarly, Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) are accompanied by various degrees of memory dysfunction. Patients with AD have an increased likelihood for seizures, whereas all four conditions share certain aspects of psychosis, depression, and sleep dysfunction. This remarkable overlap suggests common pathophysiological mechanisms, which include synaptic dysfunction and synaptotoxicity, as well as glial activation and astrogliosis. Astrogliosis is linked to synapse function via the tripartite synapse, but astrocytes also control the availability of gliotransmitters and adenosine. Here we will specifically focus on the 'adenosine hypothesis of comorbidities' implying that astrocyte activation, via overexpression of adenosine kinase (ADK), induces a deficiency in the homeostatic tone of adenosine. We present evidence from patient-derived samples showing astrogliosis and overexpression of ADK as common pathological hallmark of epilepsy, AD, PD, and ALS. We discuss a transgenic 'comorbidity model', in which brain-wide overexpression of ADK and resulting adenosine deficiency produces a comorbid spectrum of seizures, altered dopaminergic function, attentional impairment, and deficits in cognitive domains and sleep regulation. We conclude that dysfunction of adenosine signaling is common in neurological conditions, that adenosine dysfunction can explain co-morbid phenotypes, and that therapeutic adenosine augmentation might be effective for the treatment of comorbid symptoms in multiple neurological conditions.
神经病学中的共病是一个重大的概念和治疗挑战。例如,颞叶癫痫(TLE)是一种由癫痫发作和共病症状组成的综合征,包括记忆和精神障碍、抑郁以及睡眠功能障碍。同样,阿尔茨海默病(AD)、帕金森病(PD)和肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)都伴有不同程度的记忆功能障碍。AD患者癫痫发作的可能性增加,而这四种疾病在精神病、抑郁和睡眠功能障碍的某些方面存在共性。这种显著的重叠表明存在共同的病理生理机制,包括突触功能障碍和突触毒性,以及胶质细胞活化和星形胶质细胞增生。星形胶质细胞增生通过三方突触与突触功能相关联,但星形胶质细胞也控制着神经胶质递质和腺苷的可用性。在这里,我们将特别关注“共病的腺苷假说”,即星形胶质细胞通过腺苷激酶(ADK)的过度表达而活化,导致腺苷稳态张力不足。我们展示了来自患者样本的证据,表明星形胶质细胞增生和ADK过度表达是癫痫、AD、PD和ALS的共同病理特征。我们讨论了一种转基因“共病模型”,其中ADK在全脑范围内过度表达并导致腺苷缺乏,会产生包括癫痫发作、多巴胺能功能改变、注意力损害以及认知领域和睡眠调节缺陷在内的共病谱。我们得出结论,腺苷信号功能障碍在神经疾病中很常见,腺苷功能障碍可以解释共病表型,并且治疗性增加腺苷可能对治疗多种神经疾病的共病症状有效。