| Literature DB >> 29132391 |
Karim Belarbi1, Elodie Cuvelier1, Alain Destée1, Bernard Gressier1, Marie-Christine Chartier-Harlin2,3.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive movement neurodegenerative disease associated with a loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra of the brain. Oxidative stress, a condition that occurs due to imbalance in oxidant and antioxidant status, is thought to play an important role in dopaminergic neurotoxicity. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidases are multi-subunit enzymatic complexes that generate reactive oxygen species as their primary function. Increased immunoreactivities for the NADPH oxidases catalytic subunits Nox1, Nox2 and Nox4 have been reported in the brain of PD patients. Furthermore, knockout or genetic inactivation of NADPH oxidases exert a neuroprotective effect and reduce detrimental aspects of pathology in experimental models of the disease. However, the connections between NADPH oxidases and the biological processes believed to contribute to neuronal death are not well known. This review provides a comprehensive summary of our current understanding about expression and physiological function of NADPH oxidases in neurons, microglia and astrocytes and their pathophysiological roles in PD. It summarizes the findings supporting the role of both microglial and neuronal NADPH oxidases in cellular disturbances associated with PD such as neuroinflammation, alpha-synuclein accumulation, mitochondrial and synaptic dysfunction or disruption of the autophagy-lysosome system. Furthermore, this review highlights different steps that are essential for NADPH oxidases enzymatic activity and pinpoints major obstacles to overcome for the development of effective NADPH oxidases inhibitors for PD.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-synuclein; Microglia; Mitochondria; Neurodegenerative disorders; Oxidative stress; Synaptic plasticity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29132391 PMCID: PMC5683583 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-017-0225-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Fig. 1Activation of the NADPH oxidase family members. The figure illustrates for each NADPH oxidase the catalytic core region (in blue), the transmembrane maturation and stabilization subunits (in red) as well as the cytosolic subunits and the small GTPases (Rac1 and Rac2). The predicted regions for FAD and NADPH binding sites and the putative peroxidase-like region are also shown, as well as the EF hand motifs (yellow circles) that bind to Ca2+
Human NADPH oxidases genes, genomic positions and isoforms
| NADPH oxidase catalytic subunit | Official Gene symbol and Full Name HUGOa | Other Proposed Aliasesb | Entrez Gene IDdb | Genomic locationb | mRNA (RefSeq Accession Numbers; GRCh38/hg38 human genome)c | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nox1 |
| NADPH oxidase 1 | MOX1; NOH1; NOH-1; GP91-2 | 27035 | Xq22.1 | NM_007052 (isoform 1) |
| NM_013955 (isoform 2) | ||||||
| NM_001271815 (isoform 3) | ||||||
| Nox2 |
| cytochrome b-245 beta chain | CGD; NOX2; IMD34; AMCBX2; GP91-1; GP91PHOX; p91-PHOX; GP91-PHOX | 1536 | Xp21.1-p11.4 | NM_000397 → NP_000388 |
| Nox3 |
| NADPH oxidase 3 | het; GP91-3; nmf250 | 50508 | 6q25.3 | NM_015718 → NP_056533 |
| Nox4 |
| NADPH oxidase 4 | KOX; KOX-1; RENOX | 50507 | 11q14.3 | NM_016931 (isoform a) |
| NM_001143836 (isoform b) | ||||||
| NM_001143837 (isoform c) | ||||||
| NM_001291926 (isoform d) | ||||||
| NM_001291927 (isoform e) | ||||||
| NM_001291929 (isoform f) | ||||||
| NM_001300995 (isoform g) | ||||||
| NR_120406 | ||||||
| Nox5 |
| NADPH oxidase 5 | NOX5A, NOX5B | 79400 | 15q23 | NM_024505 (isoform 1) |
| NM_001184779 (isoform 2) | ||||||
| NM_001184780 (isoform 3) | ||||||
| NR_033671 | ||||||
| NR_033672 | ||||||
| Duox1 |
| dual oxidase 1 | LNOX1; THOX1; NOXEF1 | 53905 | 15q21.1 | NM_017434 (dual oxidase 1 precursor) |
| NM_175940 (dual oxidase 1 precursor) | ||||||
| Duox2 |
| dual oxidase 2 | TDH6; LNOX2; THOX2; NOXEF2; P138-TOX | 50506 | 15q21.1 | NM_001190392 dual oxidase 2 precursor |
| NM_177610 dual oxidase 2 precursor | ||||||
| NM_213999 dual oxidase 2 precursor | ||||||
| NM_024141 dual oxidase 2 precursor | ||||||
aHUGO: http://www.genenames.org/. Accessed January 5 2017
bNCBI Entrez Gene: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/. Accessed January 5 2017
chuman GRCh38/hg38 genome: https://genome.ucsc.edu/. Accessed January 5 2017
Fig. 2Cellular and subcellular expression of NADPH oxidase catalytic subunits in the brain. a Schematic diagram showing the reported cellular localization of NADPH oxidase family members in the brain cells. b Schematic diagram showing the reported subcellular localization of NADPH oxidase family members in a hypothetical cell in the brain
Fig. 3Alpha-synuclein and microglial Nox2 activation. The activation of microglia by alpha-synuclein can implicate several cell surface receptors such as P2X7, TLR2/4 and CR3 and subsequent activations of several kinases such as PKC, Akt, MAPKs, PAK and ERK1/2. This in turn could promote the phosphorylation and translocation of p47phox and subsequent Nox2 activation. Released oxygen species appear to promote microglia chemoattraction, activation and oxidative stress. Neuronal damage leads to the release of alpha-synuclein and the TLR-agonist high mobility group box protein 1 (HMGB1)
Fig. 4Proposed role for NADPH oxidases in PD. Schematic view of the link between both microglial and neuronal NADPH oxidases and cellular processes related to PD, e.g. alpha-synuclein signaling, microglia activation, oxidative stress and neuronal damage, mitochondria dysfunction, disruption of the autophagy-lysosome system, synaptic dysfunction and excitotoxicity. Localizations of NADPH oxidases are indicated in grey
Therapeutic targeting of NADPH oxidases in selected studies
| NADPH oxidase signaling step | Mode of action | Inhibitors | Experimental model | Effects of the inhibitor on the experimental model | Current therapeutic roadblocks | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subunit expression | Decrease specific subunit mRNA and protein levels | Adeno-associated virus serotype 2 (AAV2) expression cassettes with Nox1shRNA | Striatal injection of 6-OHDA in the rat | Nox1 knockdown reduced 6-OHDA-induced oxidative DNA damage and dopaminergic neuronal degeneration. | Drug delivery | [ |
| Knockdown of Nox4 achieved by adenoviral-encoded small interfering RNA | Mouse catecholaminergic neuronal cell model (CATH.a) exposed to angiotensine II | Nox4 knockdown attenuated of angiotensine II-induced mitochondrial O2∙-production. | Drug delivery | [ | ||
| Ligand-receptor binding | Block the interaction between alpha-synuclein and P2X7R | Brilliant Blue G, a P2X7R antagonist | BV2 microglial cells treated with wild type or A53T alpha-synuclein | Pretreatment with Brilliant Blue G reduced the translocation of p47phox from the cytoplasm to the membrane after treatment with each form of alpha-synuclein. | Targets one of many NADPH oxidase activators | [ |
| Complex assembly and activation | AAV2 expression cassettes with a T17N dominant negative Rac1 variant | Striatal injection of 6-OHDA in the rat | Rac1 inhibition reduced 6-OHDA-induced oxidative DNA damage and dopaminergic neuronal degeneration. | Drug delivery | [ | |
| Prevent p47phox association with NADPH oxidase complex | Apocynin | Lipopolysaccharide induced PD model: single injection of lipopolysaccharide at a dose of 5ug/5ul PBS into the SN of rats. | Apocynin prevents α-synuclein aggregation, microglial activation, dopaminergic neurodegeneration and relieves motor system abnormality following lipopolysaccharide injection. | Unspecific, dosing: | [ | |
| gp91-ds,a peptide inhibitor for NADPH oxidase assembly | SH-SY5Y dopaminergic cells exposed to rotenone | Preincubation with Nox2-ds partially attenuated LC3 and p62 protein levels and protected against rotenone-dependent upregulation in apoptotic signaling (Pal et al., 2016). | Drug delivery, pharmacokinetic and CNS biodisponibility | [ | ||
| Block PI3K signaling needed for NADPH oxidase activation | LY294002, a potent and specific cell-permeable inhibitor of PI3K | [ | ||||
| Electron transfer | Extracts electrons | Diphenyleneiodonium | Neuron-glia cultures pretreated with lipopolysaccharide, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium or rotenone | Diphenyleneiodonium protected the dopaminergic neurons at subpicomolar concentrations. | 2non-specificity for other flavoenzymes and high cytotoxicity at standard doses (μM) | [ |