Sanberg P R, Coyle J T
CRC Crit Rev Clin Neurobiol. 1984;1(1):1-44.
Huntington's Disease (HD) is a progressive neurologic disorder transmitted as autosomal dominant. The symptoms of HD, which typically appear in midlife, include disturbances in movement, psychiatric symptoms, and a progressive dementia. Neuropathologic studies indicate a distinct pattern of neuronal degeneration in HD that affects many areas of the brain but consistently and severely involves the basal ganglia including the caudate, putamen, and globus pallidus. The basal ganglia undergo a progressive atrophy due to degeneration of intrinsic neurons that results in ventricular enlargement. Over the last decade, detailed neurochemical analyses have been carried out on the brains of patients who have died with HD. These studies have demonstrated the selective degeneration of chemically defined neuronal systems including the striatal cholinergic intrinsic neurons, the striatal nigral GABAergic pathway, and striatal peptidergic neurons with the relative sparing of other systems such as the nigrostriatal pathway. These findings have resulted in a better understanding of the pathophysiologic basis for the movement disorder of HD and have led to the development of pharmacologic strategies to correct the synaptic neurochemical imbalances. Recent studies have begun to focus on mechanisms responsible for the selective neuronal degeneration in HD. One promising hypothesis evolved from the finding that intrastriatal injections of excitatory amino acid analogues reproduces the neurochemical and histologic pathology of HD in experimental animals; as a consequence, it has been hypothesized that dysfunction of excitatory amino acid neurotransmission may cause the selective neuronal degeneration of HD. Another hypothesis involves an abnormality of the plasma membrane based upon observations of differences in membrane characteristics in fibroblasts and red blood cells from HD patients as compared to suitable controls. The ultimate goals of these studies are to develop methods for identifying presymptomatic carriers of the HD gene as well as strategies for preventing the neuronal degeneration associated with expression of the gene.
亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)是一种常染色体显性遗传的进行性神经疾病。HD的症状通常出现在中年,包括运动障碍、精神症状和进行性痴呆。神经病理学研究表明,HD中神经元变性具有独特模式,影响大脑多个区域,但始终严重累及基底神经节,包括尾状核、壳核和苍白球。由于内在神经元变性,基底神经节会逐渐萎缩,导致脑室扩大。在过去十年中,对死于HD的患者大脑进行了详细的神经化学分析。这些研究表明,化学定义的神经元系统会选择性变性,包括纹状体胆碱能内在神经元、纹状体黑质γ-氨基丁酸能通路和纹状体肽能神经元,而其他系统如黑质纹状体通路相对幸免。这些发现使人们对HD运动障碍的病理生理基础有了更好的理解,并促使人们开发纠正突触神经化学失衡的药理学策略。最近的研究开始关注HD中选择性神经元变性的机制。一个有前景的假说是基于以下发现:向纹状体内注射兴奋性氨基酸类似物可在实验动物中重现HD的神经化学和组织病理学;因此,有人推测兴奋性氨基酸神经传递功能障碍可能导致HD的选择性神经元变性。另一个假说涉及质膜异常,这是基于对HD患者成纤维细胞和红细胞与合适对照相比膜特性差异的观察得出的。这些研究的最终目标是开发识别HD基因症状前携带者的方法以及预防与该基因表达相关的神经元变性的策略。