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Is Cell Death Primary or Secondary in the Pathophysiology of Idiopathic Parkinson's Disease?

期刊

BIOMOLECULES
卷 5, 期 3, 页码 1467-1479

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom5031467

关键词

neurodegenerative disease; -synuclein; protein aggregate; synaptic dysfunction; Lewy bodies; cell death

资金

  1. VolkswagenStiftung [ZN 1294, ZN 2168]

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Currently, the pathophysiology of idiopathic Parkinson's disease is explained by a loss of mainly dopaminergic nerve cells that causes a neurotransmitter deficiency. In the final stage of the disease, there is a marked loss of neurons in the substantia nigra. In addition, Lewy bodies can be found in some of the remaining neurons, which serve as the pathological hallmark of the disease. These Lewy bodies are composed mainly of aggregated -synuclein, a physiological presynaptic protein. Lewy bodies were thought to be the pathophysiologically relevant form of -synuclein because their appearance coincided with neuron loss in the substantia nigra. In consequence, neuron loss was thought to be the primary step in the neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease. On the other hand, the clinical syndrome suggests a synaptic disorder. If -synuclein aggregation was causally linked to the pathophysiology of disease, -synuclein pathology should be found at the synapse. As recently demonstrated, one to two orders of magnitude more -synuclein aggregates are present in presynaptic terminals than in Lewy bodies or Lewy neurites. Degeneration of dendritic spines associated with synaptic -synuclein aggregates has been shown to occur in human disease. In experiments, using transgenic mice or cell cultures, mild (two- to three-fold) overexpression of -synuclein caused an altered vesicle turnover and led to a reduction in neurotransmitter release. Different approaches linked these alterations to presynaptic aggregation of -synuclein. These findings may fundamentally change the pathophysiological concept of Parkinson's disease: not nerve cell loss, but the synaptic dysfunction of still existing nerve cells should become the focus of attention. From recent findings, it is quite evident that the death of dopaminergic neurons is a secondary event in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease.

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