| Literature DB >> 23179684 |
Rosanna Parlato1, Grzegorz Kreiner.
Abstract
Nucleoli are the sites where synthesis of rRNA and ribosomal assembly take place. Along with these "traditional" roles, the nucleolus controls cellular physiology and homeostasis. The cellular and molecular alterations associated with impaired nucleolar activity ("nucleolar stress") have just started to be systematically explored in the nervous system taking advantage of newly available animal models lacking rRNA synthesis in specific neurons. These studies showed that nucleolar function is necessary for neuronal survival and that its modality of action differs between and within cell types. Nucleolar function is also crucial in pathology as it controls mitochondrial activity and critical stress signaling pathways mimicking hallmarks of human neurodegenerative diseases. This mini-review will focus on the modes of action of nucleolar stress and discuss how the manipulation of nucleolar activity might underscore novel strategies to extend neuronal function and survival.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23179684 PMCID: PMC3644402 DOI: 10.1007/s00109-012-0981-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) ISSN: 0946-2716 Impact factor: 4.599
Fig. 1Diagram showing the increasing number of publications and citations related to nucleolar stress. a Number of publications found in PubMed database searching for “nucleolar + stress”. Only four out of 39 publications have been published before the year 2005. b Number of times the publications in (a) have been cited; asterisk, last updated on Aug 31, 2012
Fig. 2Schematic of the RNA polymerase I machinery at the rDNA promoters with the different signals and pathways regulating TIF-IA activity and exerting positive or negative control on nucleolar activity and integrity
Fig. 3Summary of the cellular and molecular alterations derived from nucleolar stress. The “non-traditional” nucleolar roles are depicted as concentric circles with the early events closer to the nucleolus and intersecting with the “traditional” nucleolar role in protein synthesis
Potential applications of the different types of TIF-IA mutant mice for the investigation of features linked to nucleolar stress
| Type of mutation | Phenotype | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Global knock out [ | Embryonic lethality (E8.5); growth deficits | Study of early embryonic compensatory mechanisms |
| Embryonic neural progenitors [ | Anencephalia at birth; impaired neurogenesis (E13.5) | Study of effects on early neuronal differentiation |
| Adult hippocampal neurons [ | Progressive but differential degeneration of adult hippocampal neurons | Analysis of changes of neuronal activity and protein synthesis before neuronal death |
| Embryonic or adult dopaminergic neurons [ | Parkinsonism; early mitochondrial dysfunction and mTOR downregulation | Search for biomarkers; neurorestorative/neuroprotective strategies |
| Other neurons | Unpublished observations | Analysis of context-specific responses to nucleolar stress |
| Overexpression; heterozygosity | not determined yet | Role of nucleolar stress as a disease modifier |