| Literature DB >> 34202494 |
Xiaoming Yang1,2, Yanan Ji1, Wei Wang1, Lilei Zhang1, Zehao Chen1, Miaomei Yu1, Yuntian Shen1, Fei Ding1, Xiaosong Gu1,2, Hualin Sun1.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease with the progressive loss of motor neurons, leading to a fatal paralysis. According to whether there is a family history of ALS, ALS can be roughly divided into two types: familial and sporadic. Despite decades of research, the pathogenesis of ALS is still unelucidated. To this end, we review the recent progress of ALS pathogenesis, biomarkers, and treatment strategies, mainly discuss the roles of immune disorders, redox imbalance, autophagy dysfunction, and disordered iron homeostasis in the pathogenesis of ALS, and introduce the effects of RNA binding proteins, ALS-related genes, and non-coding RNA as biomarkers on ALS. In addition, we also mention other ALS biomarkers such as serum uric acid (UA), cardiolipin (CL), chitotriosidase (CHIT1), and neurofilament light chain (NFL). Finally, we discuss the drug therapy, gene therapy, immunotherapy, and stem cell-exosomal therapy for ALS, attempting to find new therapeutic targets and strategies. A challenge is to study the various mechanisms of ALS as a syndrome. Biomarkers that have been widely explored are indispensable for the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of ALS. Moreover, the development of new genes and targets is an urgent task in this field.Entities:
Keywords: ALS; biomarkers; pathogenesis; treatment strategies
Year: 2021 PMID: 34202494 PMCID: PMC8300638 DOI: 10.3390/antiox10071012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Pattern diagram of pathogenic factors in ALS.
Biomarkers of ALS.
| Biomarkers | Description | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| RBPs | TDP-43 | TDP-43 is the main component of cytoplasmic protein inclusions in ALS patients; abnormal phosphorylation, ubiquitination, lysis, and/or nuclear depletion are prominent pathological features of ALS. | [ |
| FUS | FUS protein aggregates are common in ALS patients; the abnormal phase transition and RNA metabolism of FUS protein may be involved in the pathogenesis of ALS. | [ | |
| TAF15 | TAF15 is mutated in patients with sALS and fALS; TAF15 accumulation conferred neurodegeneration. | [ | |
| EWSR1 | EWSR1 protein presents a diffuse distribution or dotted granule structure of patients with sALS; overexpression of wild-type EWSR1 leads to neurodegeneration. | [ | |
| ATXN2 | The expansion of ATXN2 intermediate-length polyglutamine increases the risk of ALS; ATXN2 trinucleotide repeat amplification in ALS can predict the risk of the disease. | [ | |
| HnRNPs | HnRNPs is relatively rare in ALS, but definitely involved in the pathogenesis of ALS, perhaps through the combination with other common pathogenic genes (TDP-43). | [ | |
| MATR3 | MATR3 is found to partially mis-localize in ALS patients; S85C missense mutation in the MATR3 gene is a genetic cause for ALS. | [ | |
| TIA1/ | TIA1/TIAR are important stress granule components; TIAR may be involved in neuronal cell death after ischemia, while an increased risk for TIA1 LCD mutations was found in ALS patients. | [ | |
| ALS-related genes | SOD1 | SOD1 is a powerful antioxidant enzyme; At least 170 mutations in the SOD1 gene have been found to cause ALS; the toxicity of mutant SOD1, which may be aroused by the initial misfolding, are related to the pathogenesis of ALS. | [ |
| C9orf72 | An abnormal GGGGCC hexanucleotide repeat expansion in C9orf72 was identified as the most common genetic cause of fALS. | [ | |
| CHCHD10 | CHCHD10 is a mitochondrial protein located in the inter-membrane space; CHCHD10 mutations appear to be the relatively rare cause of ALS, and may be more common in patients diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia. | [ | |
| TBK1 | TBK1 is a member of the inhibitor of nuclear factor-κB kinase family; a mutation in TBK1 is the main genetic cause of ALS/FTD comorbidities (10.8%), while is less associated with ALS alone (0.5%). | [ | |
| TUBA4A | TUBA4A is a gene encoding tubulin Alpha 4A protein; mutations in TUBA4A are associated with fALS, and all patients with TUBA4A mutations experience spinal seizures accompanied by upper and lower motor neuron signs. | [ | |
| NEK1 | A significant association has been determined between NEK1 variants with loss of function and fALS risk. | [ | |
| C21orf2 | C21orf2 is associated with ALS; Over 75% of the mutations are found to be potentially detrimental. | [ | |
| CCNF | CCNF is a gene encoding cyclin F, a component of the E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase complex. Mutations in CCNF may increase TDP-43 aggregates and cause the onset of ALS; CCNF variant is considered to be a rare cause of ALS, with varying variant rates in populations from different regions. | [ | |
| KIF5A | KIF5A is a member of the kinesin family; KIF5A is a new gene associated with ALS; a mutation in the C-terminal cargo binding tail domain of KIF5A leads to ALS. | [ | |
| ANXA11 | ANXA11 is a phosphoinositide binding protein associated with RNA particles; mutations in ANXA11 can be involved in the pathogenesis of ALS through a gain-of-function mechanism involving abnormal protein aggregation. | [ | |
| GLT8D1 | GLT8D1 encodes a glycosyltransferase, the activity of glycosyltransferase is considered to be associated with the development of ALS, especially fALS. | [ | |
| SPG11 | SPG11 encodes the spatacsin protein; mutations in SPG11 are considered to be the pathogenic factor of spastic paraplegia characterized by autosomal recessive inheritance and juvenile ALS | [ | |
| Non-coding RNA | miRNAs | MiR-27a, miR-34a, miR-124, miR-142-5p, miR-155 and miR-338-3p have been studied as biomarkers and potential therapeutic targets related to ALS. | [ |
| lncRNAs | NEAT1_2 can regulate the function of ALS-associated RNA-binding proteins in the early stage of ALS; In ALS patients with FUS, TDP-43, and SOD1 mutations, 20 antisense lncRNAs have been found in total. | [ | |
| circRNAs | CircRNAs biogenesis that is regulated by inhibiting the function of DBR1 is considered to be a potential therapeutic strategy for ALS; hsa_circ_0023919, hsa_circ_0088036 and hsa_circ_0063411 are potential blood-based biomarkers of ALS. | [ | |
| Others | UA | There is a negative correlation between serum UA levels and the risk of death in patients with ALS. | [ |
| CL | Alterations in CL levels may also reflect the loss of mitochondrial integrity observed in several ALS models. | [ | |
| CHIT1 | An elevated level of CHIT1 in the cerebrospinal fluid of ALS patients has been indicated. | [ | |
| NfL | Serum NFL is positively correlated with disease progression, while a higher NFL level indicates a shorter survival period. | [ | |
Therapeutic strategies of ALS.
| Therapeutic Strategy | Description | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drug treatments | Riluzole | The only drug to extend the survival of patients with ALS. | [ |
| Edaravone | An antioxidant which can slow the progression of symptoms. | [ | |
| Baclofen, tizanidine, benzodiazepines, THC: CBD | The drugs can alleviate spasticity in patients with ALS. | [ | |
| Masitinib | A tyrosine kinase inhibitor can reduce microgliosis, motor neuron pathology, and prolong survival after paralysis. | [ | |
| Fasudil | A ROCK inhibitor that slows disease progression and prolongs survival and reduces motor neuron loss. | [ | |
| Gene therapies | Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) | ASOs directly targeting ALS-associated genes can alleviate pathology, improve motor function, and prolong survival. | [ |
| CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing | CRISPR/Cas9 approach can be used for C9orf72 repeat expansion to determine gene-based therapies; gene editing based on AAV9-SaCas9-sgRNA demonstrates its potential for treating mutant SOD1 ALS. | [ | |
| Immunotherapy | C5a/C5aR1 axis can be identified as a therapeutic target for ALS; the vaccine should be vaccinated in the early stage of C9orf72-ALS. | [ | |
| Stem cell-exosome therapy (ASC-exosome) | ASC-exosomes can reverse the mitochondrial dysfunction, reduce the activation of glial cells, and improve the movement performance in vitro and vivo ALS model. | [ | |