| Literature DB >> 34657288 |
Stephen D Ginsberg1,2, Suhasini Joshi3, Sahil Sharma3, Gianny Guzman3, Tai Wang3, Ottavio Arancio4,5, Gabriela Chiosis3,6.
Abstract
Adaptation to acute and chronic stress and/or persistent stressors is a subject of wide interest in central nervous system disorders. In this context, stress is an effector of change in organismal homeostasis and the response is generated when the brain perceives a potential threat. Herein, we discuss a nuanced and granular view whereby a wide variety of genotoxic and environmental stressors, including aging, genetic risk factors, environmental exposures, and age- and lifestyle-related changes, act as direct insults to cellular, as opposed to organismal, homeostasis. These two concepts of how stressors impact the central nervous system are not mutually exclusive. We discuss how maladaptive stressor-induced changes in protein connectivity through epichaperomes, disease-associated pathologic scaffolds composed of tightly bound chaperones, co-chaperones, and other factors, impact intracellular protein functionality altering phenotypes, that in turn disrupt and remodel brain networks ranging from intercellular to brain connectome levels. We provide an evidence-based view on how these maladaptive changes ranging from stressor to phenotype provide unique precision medicine opportunities for diagnostic and therapeutic development, especially in the context of neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer's disease where treatment options are currently limited.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; chronic stress and stressors; epichaperomes; maladaptive response to stress; stressor-to-phenotype; synaptic plasticity
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34657288 PMCID: PMC8688321 DOI: 10.1111/jnc.15525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurochem ISSN: 0022-3042 Impact factor: 5.372