Levin Michael C, Lee Sangmin, Gardner Lidia A, Shin Yoojin, Douglas Joshua N, Groover Chassidy J
Veterans Administration Medical Center, Memphis, TN, USA,
Departments of Neurology,
Degener Neurol Neuromuscul Dis. 2012 Dec 4;2:175-187. doi: 10.2147/DNND.S38353. eCollection 2012.
Considering there are no treatments for progressive forms of multiple sclerosis (MS), a comprehensive understanding of the role of neurodegeneration in the pathogenesis of MS should lead to novel therapeutic strategies to treat it. Many studies have implicated viral triggers as a cause of MS, yet no single virus has been exclusively shown to cause MS. Given this, human and animal viral models of MS are used to study its pathogenesis. One example is human T-lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP). Importantly, HAM/TSP is similar clinically, pathologically, and immunologically to progressive MS. Interestingly, both MS and HAM/TSP patients were found to make antibodies to heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) A1, an RNA-binding protein overexpressed in neurons. Anti-hnRNP A1 antibodies reduced neuronal firing and caused neurodegeneration in neuronal cell lines, suggesting the autoantibodies are pathogenic. Further, microarray analyses of neurons exposed to anti-hnRNP A1 antibodies revealed novel pathways of neurodegeneration related to alterations of RNA levels of the spinal paraplegia genes (SPGs). Mutations in SPGs cause hereditary spastic paraparesis, genetic disorders clinically indistinguishable from progressive MS and HAM/TSP. Thus, there is a strong association between involvement of SPGs in neurodegeneration and the clinical phenotype of progressive MS and HAM/TSP patients, who commonly develop spastic paraparesis. Taken together, these data begin to clarify mechanisms of neurodegeneration related to the clinical presentation of patients with chronic immune-mediated neurological disease of the central nervous system, which will give insights into the design of novel therapies to treat these neurological diseases.
鉴于目前尚无针对进展型多发性硬化症(MS)的治疗方法,全面了解神经退行性变在MS发病机制中的作用有望带来新的治疗策略。许多研究表明病毒触发因素是MS的病因之一,但尚未有单一病毒被明确证实可引发MS。基于此,MS的人类和动物病毒模型被用于研究其发病机制。其中一个例子是1型人类嗜T淋巴细胞病毒相关性脊髓病/热带痉挛性截瘫(HAM/TSP)。重要的是,HAM/TSP在临床、病理和免疫方面与进展型MS相似。有趣的是,MS和HAM/TSP患者均被发现会产生针对异质性核糖核蛋白(hnRNP)A1的抗体,hnRNP A1是一种在神经元中过表达的RNA结合蛋白。抗hnRNP A1抗体可降低神经元放电,并在神经元细胞系中导致神经退行性变,这表明自身抗体具有致病性。此外,对暴露于抗hnRNP A1抗体的神经元进行微阵列分析,揭示了与脊髓截瘫基因(SPG)RNA水平改变相关的神经退行性变新途径。SPG突变会导致遗传性痉挛性截瘫,这是一种临床上与进展型MS和HAM/TSP难以区分的遗传性疾病。因此,SPG参与神经退行性变与进展型MS和HAM/TSP患者的临床表型之间存在密切关联,这些患者通常会出现痉挛性截瘫。综上所述,这些数据开始阐明与慢性免疫介导的中枢神经系统神经疾病患者临床表现相关的神经退行性变机制,这将为设计治疗这些神经疾病的新疗法提供思路。