Protein Targets of Oxidative Damage in Human Neurodegenerative Diseases with Abnormal Protein Aggregates

被引:167
|
作者
Martinez, Anna
Portero-Otin, Manuel [2 ]
Pamplona, Reinald [2 ]
Ferrer, Isidre [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Barcelona, Hosp Univ Bellvitge, Ctr Inbvestigac Biomed Red Enfermedades Neurodege, Serv Anat Patol,Inst Neuropatol,IDIBELL, Lhospitalet De Llobregat 08907, Spain
[2] Univ Lleida, Inst Recerca Biomed Lleida, Dept Expt Med, Lleida, Spain
关键词
Alzheimer disease; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; cytoskeleton; energy metabolism; Huntington disease; mitochondria; neurodegeneration; nitration; oxidative stress; Parkinson disease; tauopathies; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; REDOX PROTEOMICS IDENTIFICATION; G93A-SOD1 TRANSGENIC MICE; FIBRILLARY ACIDIC PROTEIN; CREATINE-KINASE BB; HUMAN BRAIN CORTEX; ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; REACTIVE OXYGEN; PARKINSONS-DISEASE; LIPID-PEROXIDATION;
D O I
10.1111/j.1750-3639.2009.00326.x
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Human neurodegenerative diseases with abnormal protein aggregates are associated with aberrant post-translational modifications, solubility, aggregation and fibril formation of selected proteins which cannot be degraded by cytosolic proteases, ubiquitin-protesome system and autophagy, and, therefore, accumulate in cells and extracellular compartments as residual debris. In addition to the accumulation of "primary" proteins, several other mechanisms are involved in the degenerative process and probably may explain crucial aspects such as the timing, selective cellular vulnerability and progression of the disease in particular individuals. One of these mechanisms is oxidative stress, which occurs in the vast majority of, if not all, degenerative diseases of the nervous system. The present review covers most of the protein targets that have been recognized as modified proteins mainly using bidimensional gel electrophoresis, Western blotting with oxidative and nitrosative markers, and identified by mass spectrometry in Alzheimer disease; certain tauopathies such as progressive supranuclear palsy, Pick disease, argyrophilic grain disease and frontotemporal lobar degeneration linked to mutations in tau protein, for example, FTLD-tau, Parkinson disease and related alpha-synucleinopathies; Huntington disease; and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, together with related animal and cellular models. Vulnerable proteins can be mostly grouped in defined metabolic pathways covering glycolysis and energy metabolism, cytoskeletal, chaperoning, cellular stress responses, and members of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Available information points to the fact that vital metabolic pathways are hampered by protein oxidative damage in several human degenerative diseases and that oxidative damage occurs at very early stages of the disease. Yet parallel functional studies are limited and further work is needed to document whether protein oxidation results in loss of activity and impaired performance. A better understanding of proteins susceptible to oxidation and nitration may serve to define damaged metabolic networks at early stages of disease and to advance therapeutic interventions to attenuate disease progression.
引用
收藏
页码:281 / 297
页数:17
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