Асосий контентга ўтиш
AkademIndex

Маҳсулотлар

Ишлаб чиқувчилар учун

AkademBaseЭкотизим учун очиқ API
Шарҳ мақола

α‐Synuclein and Parkinson's disease

Alessandra RecchiaDepartment of Pharmacology and Anesthesiology University of Padova 35131 Padova ItalyPatrizia DebettoDepartment of Pharmacology and Anesthesiology University of Padova 35131 Padova ItalyAlessandro NegroCentro di Ricerche in Biotecnologie Innovative University of Padova 35131 Padova ItalyDiego GuidolinDepartment of Human Anatomy and Physiology University of Padova 35131 Padova ItalyStephen D. SkaperNeurology and GI Centre of Excellence for Drug Discovery GlaxoSmithKline Research and Development Limited Harlow Essex CM19 5AW U.KPietro GiustiDepartment of Pharmacology and Anesthesiology University of Padova 35131 Padova Italy
2004en
ABI

Аннотация

Alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) is a small soluble protein expressed primarily at presynaptic terminals in the central nervous system. Interest in alpha-syn has increased dramatically after the discovery of a relationship between its dysfunction and several neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease (PD). The physiological functions of alpha-syn remain to be fully defined, although recent data suggest a role in regulating membrane stability and neuronal plasticity. Various trigger factors, either environmental or genetic, can lead to a cascade of events involving misfolding or loss of normal function of alpha-syn. In dopaminergic neurons, this may promote a vicious cycle in which elevation in cytoplasmic dopamine, oxidative stress, alpha-syn dysfunction, and disruption of vesicle function lead to dopaminergic cell loss and PD. Alpha-syn dysfunction appears to be a common feature of all forms of PD. The mechanism by which alpha-syn induces neuronal cell toxicity may invoke multiple pathways, such as aggregation or interaction with other proteins and molecules, including synphilin-1, chaperone 14-3-3 protein, and dopamine itself. This complexity has hindered the development of models to study PD. The available animal models of PD, each present distinct advantages and limits. Findings to date suggest that alpha-syn-based models represent a paradigm, which is closest to the human pathology.

Ҳали таржима қилинмаган

Идентификаторлар

Иқтибослар ва манбалар

2 та иқтибос0 та фойдаланилган манба