Birgbauer Eric
Department of Biology, Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC 29733, USA.
Explor Neuroprotective Ther. 2024;4(4):349-365. doi: 10.37349/ent.2024.00088. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
The central nervous system (CNS) is one of the most complex physiological systems, and treatment of CNS disorders represents an area of major medical need. One critical aspect of the CNS is its lack of regeneration, such that damage is often permanent. The damage often leads to neurodegeneration, and so strategies for neuroprotection could lead to major medical advances. The G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family is one of the major receptor classes, and they have been successfully targeted clinically. One class of GPCRs is those activated by bioactive lysophospholipids as ligands, especially sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) and lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). Research has been increasingly demonstrating the important roles that S1P and LPA, and their receptors, play in physiology and disease. In this review, I describe the role of S1P and LPA receptors in neurodegeneration and potential roles in neuroprotection. Much of our understanding of the role of S1P receptors has been through pharmacological tools. One such tool, fingolimod (also known as FTY720), which is a S1P receptor agonist but a functional antagonist in the immune system, is clinically efficacious in multiple sclerosis by producing a lymphopenia to reduce autoimmune attacks; however, there is evidence that fingolimod is also neuroprotective. Furthermore, fingolimod is neuroprotective in many other neuropathologies, including stroke, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, Rett syndrome, Alzheimer's disease, and others that are discussed here. LPA receptors also appear to be involved, being upregulated in a variety of neuropathologies. Antagonists or mutations of LPA receptors, especially LPA, are neuroprotective in a variety of conditions, including cortical development, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, stroke and others discussed here. Finally, LPA receptors may interact with other receptors, including a functional interaction with plasticity related genes.
中枢神经系统(CNS)是最复杂的生理系统之一,中枢神经系统疾病的治疗是一个存在重大医疗需求的领域。中枢神经系统的一个关键方面是其缺乏再生能力,因此损伤往往是永久性的。这种损伤常常导致神经退行性变,所以神经保护策略可能会带来重大的医学进展。G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)家族是主要的受体类别之一,并且它们已在临床上成功作为靶点。一类GPCR是那些由生物活性溶血磷脂作为配体激活的受体,特别是1 - 磷酸鞘氨醇(S1P)和溶血磷脂酸(LPA)。研究越来越多地证明了S1P、LPA及其受体在生理和疾病中所起的重要作用。在这篇综述中,我描述了S1P和LPA受体在神经退行性变中的作用以及在神经保护中的潜在作用。我们对S1P受体作用的许多理解是通过药理学工具获得的。一种这样的工具,芬戈莫德(也称为FTY720),它是一种S1P受体激动剂,但在免疫系统中是一种功能性拮抗剂,通过产生淋巴细胞减少以减少自身免疫攻击,在多发性硬化症中具有临床疗效;然而,有证据表明芬戈莫德也具有神经保护作用。此外,芬戈莫德在许多其他神经病理学中具有神经保护作用,包括中风、帕金森病、亨廷顿病、雷特综合征、阿尔茨海默病以及本文讨论的其他疾病。LPA受体似乎也参与其中,在多种神经病理学中上调。LPA受体的拮抗剂或突变体,特别是LPA,在多种情况下具有神经保护作用,包括皮质发育、创伤性脑损伤、脊髓损伤、中风以及本文讨论的其他情况。最后,LPA受体可能与其他受体相互作用,包括与可塑性相关基因的功能性相互作用。