Julien J P, Couillard-Després S, Meier J
Centre for Research in Neuroscience, McGill University, The Montreal General Hospital Research Institute, Québec, Canada.
Brain Pathol. 1998 Oct;8(4):759-69. doi: 10.1111/j.1750-3639.1998.tb00199.x.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an adult-onset neurological disorder of multiple etiologies that affects primarily motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. Abnormal accumulations of neurofilaments (NFs) in motor neurons and a down-regulation of mRNA for the NF light subunit (NF-L) are associated with ALS, but it remains unclear to what extent these NF perturbations contribute to human disease. Transgenic mouse studies demonstrated that overexpression of normal and mutant NF proteins can sometimes provoke a motor neuronopathy characterized by the presence of abnormal NF accumulations resembling those found in ALS. Remarkably, the motor neuronopathy in transgenic mice overexpressing human NF heavy (NF-H) subunits was rescued by the co-expression of a human NF-L transgene at levels that restored a correct stoichiometry of NF-L to NF-H subunits. Transgenic approaches have also been used to investigate the role of NFs in disease caused by Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) mutations, which is responsible for approximately 2% cases of ALS. Studies with transgenic mice expressing low levels of a fusion NF-H/lacZ protein, in which NFs are withheld from the axonal compartment, suggested that axonal NFs are not toxic intermediates required for SOD1-mediated disease. On the contrary, overexpression of human NF-H proteins was found to confer an effective protection against mutant SOD1 toxicity in transgenic mice, a phenomenon that may be due to the ability of NF proteins to chelate calcium. In conclusion, transgenic studies showed that disorganized NFs can sometimes have noxious effects resulting in neuronopathy. However, in the context of motor neuron disease caused by mutant SOD1, there is emerging evidence that NF proteins rather play a protective role.
肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)是一种多病因的成人起病的神经疾病,主要影响大脑和脊髓中的运动神经元。运动神经元中神经丝(NFs)的异常积聚以及NF轻链亚基(NF-L)mRNA的下调与ALS有关,但这些NF紊乱在多大程度上导致人类疾病仍不清楚。转基因小鼠研究表明,正常和突变NF蛋白的过度表达有时会引发一种运动神经元病,其特征是存在类似于ALS中发现的异常NF积聚。值得注意的是,在过度表达人NF重链(NF-H)亚基的转基因小鼠中,通过共表达人NF-L转基因,将NF-L与NF-H亚基的化学计量比恢复到正确水平,从而挽救了运动神经元病。转基因方法也被用于研究NFs在由铜/锌超氧化物歧化酶(SOD1)突变引起的疾病中的作用,SOD1突变导致约2%的ALS病例。对表达低水平融合NF-H/lacZ蛋白的转基因小鼠的研究表明,轴突中没有NFs,这表明轴突NFs不是SOD1介导疾病所需的有毒中间体。相反,发现人NF-H蛋白的过度表达能有效保护转基因小鼠免受突变SOD1毒性的影响,这种现象可能是由于NF蛋白螯合钙的能力。总之,转基因研究表明,紊乱的NFs有时会产生有害影响,导致神经元病。然而,在由突变SOD1引起的运动神经元疾病的背景下,越来越多的证据表明NF蛋白反而起到保护作用。