| Literature DB >> 32505190 |
Sarah Schram1, Jeffrey A Loeb2, Fei Song3.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive, fatal disease affecting the neuromuscular system. While there have been a number of important genetic discoveries, there are no therapeutics capable of stopping its insidious progression. Lessons from clinical histories reveal that ALS can start focally at a single limb, but then segmentally spread up and down the spinal cord as well as in the motor cortex and cortex of frontal and temporal lobes until respiratory muscles fail. With or without a clear genetic etiology, often there is no explanation as to why it starts in one region of the body versus another. Similarly, once the disease starts the mechanisms by which the neurodegenerative process spreads are not known. Here, we summarize recent work in animal models that support the hypothesis that critical environmental contributions, such as a nerve injury, can initiate the disease process. We also propose that pathological axoglial signaling by the glial growth factor neuregulin-1 leads to the slow propagation of neuroinflammation resulting in neurodegeneration up and down the spinal cord and that locally applied drugs that block neuregulin-1 signaling could slow or halt the spread of disease.Entities:
Keywords: Inhibition of neuregulin-mediated inflammation; Nerve injury-mediated neuroinflammation; Neuronal-glial communication through glial growth factor neuregulin
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32505190 PMCID: PMC7276078 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-020-01849-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1Time course of injury-induced functional, inflammatory, and neuronal changes in the SOD1 rat. This figure summarizes the longitudinal effects of mutant SOD1 protein both on motor function and cellular pathophysiology after a single sciatic nerve injury. While WT animals recovered fully from the injury within 5 weeks, they had only mild microgliosis/astrocytosis in the acute recovery stage. In contrast, injured SOD1 animals failed to recover and showed increased and sustained microgliosis followed by a premature astrocytic recruitment and neuronal synaptic loss. This model combines an environmental insult with a genetic defect that can help elucidate the functional and physiological effects of ALS disease onset and progression that could be used to develop targeted therapeutics (taken from [18] with the permission)
Fig. 2Proposed mechanism of nerve-injury-induced activation of neuregulin-1 leads to spread of disease. In the presence of mutant SOD1 protein, nerve injury produces a heightened, NRG-induced inflammatory response leading to a permanent loss of synapses that spreads up and down the spinal cord and resulting in progressive neurodegeneration. Results summarized in Fig. 1 suggest that this inflammatory response starts with microglia followed by a second wave of astroglial reactivity that correlates with a significant loss of motor neuron synaptic inputs