Crotty Grace F, Ascherio Alberto, Schwarzschild Michael A
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Departments of Epidemiology and Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Exp Neurol. 2017 Dec;298(Pt B):210-224. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2017.06.017. Epub 2017 Jun 13.
Oxidative stress has been implicated as a core contributor to the initiation and progression of multiple neurological diseases. Genetic and environmental factors can produce oxidative stress through mitochondrial dysfunction leading to the degeneration of dopaminergic and other neurons underlying Parkinson disease (PD). Although clinical trials of antioxidants have thus far failed to demonstrate slowed progression of PD, oxidative stress remains a compelling target. Rather than prompting abandonment of antioxidant strategies, these failures have raised the bar for justifying drug and dosing selections and for improving study designs to test for disease modification by antioxidants. Urate, the main antioxidant found in plasma as well as the end product of purine metabolism in humans, has emerged as a promising potential neuroprotectant with advantages that distinguish it from previously tested antioxidant agents. Uniquely, higher urate levels in plasma or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have been linked to both a lower risk of developing PD and to a slower rate of its subsequent progression in numerous large prospective epidemiological and clinical cohorts. Laboratory evidence that urate confers neuroprotection in cellular and animal models of PD, possibly via the Nrf2 antioxidant response pathway, further strengthened its candidacy for rapid clinical translation. An early phase trial of the urate precursor inosine demonstrated its capacity to safely produce well tolerated, long-term elevation of plasma and CSF urate in early PD, supporting a phase 3 trial now underway to determine whether oral inosine dosed to elevate urate to concentrations predictive of favorable prognosis in PD slows clinical decline in people with recently diagnosed, dopamine transporter-deficient PD.
氧化应激被认为是多种神经疾病发生和发展的核心因素。遗传和环境因素可通过线粒体功能障碍产生氧化应激,导致帕金森病(PD)潜在的多巴胺能神经元和其他神经元变性。尽管迄今为止抗氧化剂的临床试验未能证明能减缓PD的进展,但氧化应激仍是一个引人注目的靶点。这些试验失败并未促使人们放弃抗氧化策略,反而提高了药物和剂量选择的标准,以及改进研究设计以测试抗氧化剂对疾病的改善作用。尿酸是血浆中主要的抗氧化剂以及人体嘌呤代谢的终产物,已成为一种有前景的潜在神经保护剂,其优势使其有别于先前测试的抗氧化剂。独特的是,在众多大型前瞻性流行病学和临床队列研究中,血浆或脑脊液(CSF)中较高的尿酸水平与较低的PD发病风险以及随后较慢的疾病进展速度有关。实验室证据表明,尿酸可能通过Nrf2抗氧化反应途径在PD的细胞和动物模型中发挥神经保护作用,这进一步增强了其迅速进行临床转化的可能性。尿酸前体肌苷的一项早期试验表明,它能够在早期PD中安全地使血浆和脑脊液尿酸长期升高且耐受性良好,这支持了目前正在进行的一项3期试验,以确定口服肌苷使尿酸升高到预测PD预后良好的浓度是否能减缓新诊断的多巴胺转运体缺陷型PD患者的临床衰退。