Mohan Maneesh, Mannan Ashi, Singh Thakur Gurjeet
Chitkara College of Pharmacy, Chitkara University, Rajpura, 140401, Punjab, India.
Inflammopharmacology. 2025 Jun 23. doi: 10.1007/s10787-025-01816-9.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that is mainly caused by the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra. Although the pathological feature involves α-synuclein aggregation, recent findings suggest that systemic immune dysregulation is a key process in initiating and advancing the disease. This article seeks to untangle the complex molecular mechanisms that contribute to the immune response in PD, with specific emphasis on innate and adaptive immune processes. α-Synuclein-induced T-cell-mediated neuronal degeneration reveals a causal relationship between peripheral immunity and central neurodegeneration. At the same time, stimulation of innate immune sensors like the NLRP3 inflammasome in microglia has been found to accelerate neuroinflammation and lead to neuronal loss. Mitochondrial dysfunction, another key hallmark of PD, leads to defective mitophagy and release of mitochondrial danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), further exaggerating inflammatory signals through NLRP3 and other mechanisms. Moreover, defective autophagic and lysosomal degradation machinery may perpetuate chronic inflammation and immune cell activation. Gut microbiota-gut-associated lymphoid tissue-peripheral immune cell interaction with the blood-brain barrier also comes into play as a key player in PD neuroimmune cross-talk. We specifically address therapeutic implications, focusing on the promise of immune checkpoint targeting, inhibition of inflammasomes, and mitophagy improvement as new disease-modifying approaches. Elucidation of these complex immune mechanisms offers key insights into PD pathophysiology and opens promising immunomodulatory therapeutic paths. This review integrates cutting-edge discoveries and outlines a shared model to improve understanding of the systemic immune setting in Parkinson's disease.
帕金森病(PD)是一种神经退行性疾病,主要由黑质多巴胺能神经元的变性引起。尽管其病理特征涉及α-突触核蛋白聚集,但最近的研究结果表明,全身免疫失调是引发和推进该疾病的关键过程。本文旨在梳理导致PD免疫反应的复杂分子机制,特别强调固有免疫和适应性免疫过程。α-突触核蛋白诱导的T细胞介导的神经元变性揭示了外周免疫与中枢神经变性之间的因果关系。同时,已发现小胶质细胞中NLRP3炎性小体等固有免疫传感器的刺激会加速神经炎症并导致神经元丢失。线粒体功能障碍是PD的另一个关键标志,会导致线粒体自噬缺陷和线粒体危险相关分子模式(DAMPs)的释放,通过NLRP3和其他机制进一步加剧炎症信号。此外,自噬和溶酶体降解机制的缺陷可能会使慢性炎症和免疫细胞激活持续存在。肠道微生物群-肠道相关淋巴组织-外周免疫细胞与血脑屏障的相互作用在PD神经免疫串扰中也起着关键作用。我们特别探讨了治疗意义,重点关注免疫检查点靶向、炎性小体抑制和线粒体自噬改善作为新的疾病修饰方法的前景。阐明这些复杂的免疫机制为PD病理生理学提供了关键见解,并开辟了有前景的免疫调节治疗途径。这篇综述整合了前沿发现,并概述了一个共享模型,以增进对帕金森病全身免疫环境的理解。