| Literature DB >> 22830014 |
Kalina Venkova-Hristova1, Alexandar Christov, Zarine Kamaluddin, Peter Kobalka, Kenneth Hensley.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that cannot be slowed substantially using any currently-available clinical tools. Through decades of studying sporadic and familial ALS (SALS and FALS), researchers are coming to understand ALS as a complex syndrome with diverse genetic and environmental etiologies. It is know appreciated that motor neuron degeneration in ALS requires active (gain of function) and passive (loss of function) events to occur in non-neuronal cells, especially astrocytes and microglia. These neuroinflammatory processes produce paracrine factors that detrimentally affect motor neurons, precipitating protein aggregation and compromising cytoskeletal integrity. The result is a loss of neuronal homeostasis and progressive die-back of motor axons culminating in death of the afflicted motor neurons. This review will discuss experimental therapeutics that have been tested in murine ALS models, with an emphasis on those that have progressed to human clinical trials. Reasons will be considered for the frequent failure of preclinical successes to translate into positive clinical outcomes. Finally, this review will explore current trends in experimental therapeutics for ALS with emphasis on the emerging interest in axon guidance signaling pathways as novel targets for pharmacological support of neural cytoskeletal structure and function in order to slow ALS.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22830014 PMCID: PMC3399448 DOI: 10.1155/2012/187234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Int ISSN: 2090-1860
Mendelian and non-Mendelian loci known to cause FALS or confer risk for SALS. Polymorphisms in the VEGF promoter that were originally associated with increased ALS risk have not been confirmed in subsequent studies but may act as modifiers of disease onset or progression in subsets of ALS cases [4].
| Mendelian genes for heritable ALS (FALS) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene | Location | Heritance | Protein | Pathway or effect |
|
| 14q11.2 | Dominant | Angiogenin | rRNA transcription |
|
| 2q33 | Recessive | Alsin | Endosome/membrane trafficking |
|
| 9p21.2 | Dominant | Uncharacterized | Altered C9ORF72 RNA splicing, formation of nuclear RNA foci |
|
| 6q21 | Recessive | FIG4 homolog | Endosomal trafficking |
|
| 16p11.2 | Both | Fused in sarcoma | Altered RNA processing, formation of inclusion bodies |
|
| 10p13 | Both | Optineurin | Golgi maintenance, membrane trafficking and exocytosis, formation of inclusion bodies |
|
| 9q34.12 | Dominant | Senataxin | DNA and RNA processing |
|
| 21q22.11 | Almost | Superoxide | Protein aggregation, possible gains of redox function, impaired axonal transport |
|
| 15q21.2 | Recessive | Spatacsin | Impaired axonal transport |
|
| 1p36.22 | Dominant | TAR DNA binding | RNA processing, formation of protein inclusion bodies |
|
| Xp11.231 | X-linked | Ubiquilin-2 | Proteasomal protein degradation, inclusion body formation |
|
| 20q13.32 | Dominant | Vesicle-associated | Vesicle trafficking |
|
| 9p13.3 | Dominant | Valosin-containing | Proteasomal degradation, endosomal trafficking, vesicle sorting |
|
| ||||
| Susceptibility loci for sporadic ALS (SALS) | ||||
| Gene | Location | Polymorphism | Protein | OR (95% CI) |
|
| ||||
|
| 9p21.2 | rs2814707 | Unknown | 1.25 (1.19–1.32) |
|
| 19p13.1 | rs12608932 | Unc-13 | 1.18 (1.13–1.24) |
|
| 12q24.12 | Poly-Q | Ataxin-2 | n.a. |