Guerrero Erika N, Wang Haibo, Mitra Joy, Hegde Pavana M, Stowell Sara E, Liachko Nicole F, Kraemer Brian C, Garruto Ralph M, Rao K S, Hegde Muralidhar L
Department of Radiation Oncology, Houston Methodist Research Institute, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Centre for Neuroscience, Institute for Scientific Research and Technology Services (INDICASAT-AIP), City of Knowledge, Panama.
Prog Neurobiol. 2016 Oct-Nov;145-146:78-97. doi: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.09.004. Epub 2016 Sep 28.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a common motor neuron disease affecting two per 100,000 people worldwide, encompasses at least five distinct pathological subtypes, including, ALS-SOD1, ALS-C9orf72, ALS-TDP-43, ALS-FUS and Guam-ALS. The etiology of a major subset of ALS involves toxicity of the TAR DNA-binding protein-43 (TDP-43). A second RNA/DNA binding protein, fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma (FUS/TLS) has been subsequently associated with about 1% of ALS patients. While mutations in TDP-43 and FUS have been linked to ALS, the key contributing molecular mechanism(s) leading to cell death are still unclear. One unique feature of TDP-43 and FUS pathogenesis in ALS is their nuclear clearance and simultaneous cytoplasmic aggregation in affected motor neurons. Since the discoveries in the last decade implicating TDP-43 and FUS toxicity in ALS, a majority of studies have focused on their cytoplasmic aggregation and disruption of their RNA-binding functions. However, TDP-43 and FUS also bind to DNA, although the significance of their DNA binding in disease-affected neurons has been less investigated. A recent observation of accumulated genomic damage in TDP-43 and FUS-linked ALS and association of FUS with neuronal DNA damage repair pathways indicate a possible role of deregulated DNA binding function of TDP-43 and FUS in ALS. In this review, we discuss the different ALS disease subtypes, crosstalk of etiopathologies in disease progression, available animal models and their limitations, and recent advances in understanding the specific involvement of RNA/DNA binding proteins, TDP-43 and FUS, in motor neuron diseases.
肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)是一种常见的运动神经元疾病,全球每10万人中约有两人患病,它至少包括五种不同的病理亚型,即ALS-SOD1、ALS-C9orf72、ALS-TDP-43、ALS-FUS和关岛型ALS。ALS主要亚型的病因涉及TAR DNA结合蛋白43(TDP-43)的毒性。另一种RNA/DNA结合蛋白,即肉瘤融合蛋白/脂肪肉瘤易位蛋白(FUS/TLS),随后被发现与约1%的ALS患者有关。虽然TDP-43和FUS的突变与ALS有关,但导致细胞死亡的关键分子机制仍不清楚。TDP-43和FUS在ALS发病机制中的一个独特特征是它们在受影响的运动神经元中从细胞核清除并同时在细胞质中聚集。自上世纪九十年代发现TDP-43和FUS毒性与ALS有关以来,大多数研究都集中在它们的细胞质聚集以及RNA结合功能的破坏上。然而,TDP-43和FUS也与DNA结合,尽管它们在疾病影响的神经元中与DNA结合的意义尚未得到充分研究。最近在TDP-43和FUS相关的ALS中观察到基因组损伤的积累以及FUS与神经元DNA损伤修复途径的关联,表明TDP-43和FUS的DNA结合功能失调在ALS中可能发挥作用。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了不同的ALS疾病亚型、疾病进展中病因病理学的相互作用、现有的动物模型及其局限性,以及在理解RNA/DNA结合蛋白TDP-43和FUS在运动神经元疾病中的具体作用方面的最新进展。