Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
725 - Molecular neurobiology of disease  Parkinson’s disease  Schizophrenia  Alzheimer’s disease  Reference List Approaches  epidemiology  genetic  chromosome  gene / protein  pharmacology  anatomical  post-mortem  MRI/PET  animal models Human Brain  cut vertically down midline Parkinson’s disease  Loss of dopaminergic neurons  normal: 4% per decade  Parkinson’s: 70-80% loss normal substantia nigra Parkinson’s Symptoms  Hard to initiate movement  Interaction of substantia nigra with cortex see 746 lecture 6 Therapy  L-DOPA  cross blood-brain barrier  dopamine agonists  MAO-B inhibitors (selegiline = deprenyl)  cell replacement  fetal midbrain transplants  pigs  carotid body  stem cells  deep brain [=thalamus] stimulation Animal model  Model with MPTP  MPP+  Neuronal damage,  activates microglia,  which produce NO (iNOS),  causes further neuronal damage MPTP (1-methyl-4-phenyl 1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine) MPP 1-Methyl-4phenylpyridinium Causation  Inherited disorder  *a-synuclein (folds SNAREs)  Parkin (E3 ubiquitin ligase)  DJ-1 (stress response chaperone)  PINK-1 (mitochondrial protein kinase)  *LRRK2 (another ?mitochondrial kinase)  It is not clear why mutations in a-synuclein, or parkin or [] genes cause nigral dopaminergic cell death in familial PD [Le W & Appel SH (2004)] *dominant – others are recessive Causation  Environmental factors too  Rotenone  fish poison  blocks mitochondrial function  upregulates a-synuclein  oxidises DJ-1  Paraquat One model inhibitors of parkin Another model Summary  Parkinson’s has  well-defined deficit – loss of dopaminergic cells  well-described pathology & behaviour  variety of therapies  no cure  no known cause Schizophrenia  Positive (hallucinations) & negative symptoms (asociality)  possibly several illnesses  seasonal  highly inherited Developmental disease  genetic cause :  DISC1 or a chromosome translocation  caused by failure of neurons to migrate ?  red shows areas less in Sc Dopamine hypothesis  positive symptoms respond to treatment  negative symptoms do not respond to treatment  DA antagonists  Chlorpromazine  side effects, e.g. Parkinsonism, constipation  Haloperidol  D2 (+D3, D4 +5-HT2A) blocker Newer drugs  e.g. clozapine  dopamine D2 receptors and 5-HT action  D2 receptor block is key point  e.g. mouse model  -ve symptoms from  DA in prefrontal cortex  5-HT action helps -ve symptoms  NMDA (glutamate) receptors blocked by phencyclidine, relieves many symptoms Depression  5-HT (=serotonin)  main treatment is with uptake inhibitors  SSRI eg Prozac  Noradrenaline  also selective reuptake inhibitors PFC: pre-frontal cortex Summary so far  ethical issues “impede” research  animal models hard to interpret  key concept: neural diseases identified with cellular / molecular deficit  disease related to change in specific neurotransmitter  complexity of CNS leads to side effects Dementia  Reduction of brain volume and cells with age  Dementia increases with age  at 65, 11% of USA had dementia  70% of dementia is Alzheimer’s  15% from strokes  at 85, 47% affected  Early onset Alzheimer’s inherited  <1% of cases Alois Alzheimer  On November 3, 1906, Alois Alzheimer gave a lecture to the Meeting of the Psychiatrists of South West Germany, presenting the neuropathological and clinical description of the features of one of his cases, Auguste D., who had died of a dementing illness at the age of 55, Alzheimer’s Symptoms  Forgetfulness  untidiness  confusion  less movement  storage of new memory reduced  finally loss of bodily function Neuroanatomy  cortex very reduced normal Alzheimer Neuroanatomy  cortex reduced - note gaps between folds Neurodegeneration  brains feature  plaques (Ab = b-amyloid)  tangles (tau) Neurofibrillary tangles  micrograph drawing by Alois Alzheimer Development of tau Amyloid hypothesis  Down’s syndrome leads to AD by 40  linked to chromosome 21  Positional cloning identified:  amyloid-b (Ab) peptide 40-42 amino acids  families  670 with mutations in bAPP / 692 / 716 & 717  amyloid b toxic to cultures Presenilins  Familial early onset dominant AD linked to mutations on chromosomes 14 & 1  presenilin I : mutations lead to onset at age 28  presenilin II : second homologous gene  mutations  are in regions conserved between PSI and PSII associated with AD  lead to increased Ab production Presenilins  code for two secretases b and g  involved in processing bAPP b a g a secretase now called ADAM b secretase called BACE Proteolysis of APP Normal amyloidogenic APP Proteolysis of Ab  In non-familial AD, plaques caused not by production of Ab but by failure to degrade it  Little evidence for increased production of Ab peptide  maybe normally degraded quickly  half life 1-2 hr  tangles resistant to degradation  enzymes:  neprilysin & insulin-degrading-enzyme Neprilysin  Neprilysin knockout mice have more Ab42 Major problem  how does faulty b-amyloid lead to tangles of tau?  tau is hyperphosphorylated  GSK-3 glycogen synthase kinase More direct interaction?  tau and Ab form complexes  GSK-3 phosphorylates tau in complex tau Ab in neurons Ab is extracellular tau v Ab  AD has both tau and Ab  other diseases have just tangles of tau Apolipoprotein E  Another family gene for late onset of AD produces Apolipoprotein E Apolipoprotein E - cont  receptor (LRP) expressed in astrocytes  normal role is in cholesterol transport  may aid in clearance of b-amyloid from brain to blood  mutations disrupt clearance Oxidative stress  main function of b-amyloid may be to protect cells from reactive Oxygen radicals  damage to mitochondria leads to *OH  shortage of energy (or oxygen) increases likelihood of AD  through high [Ca]  metal ions might affect build up of b-amyloid Therapy ??  cholinergic therapy   secretase blockers  relief of oxidative stress  Apolipoprotein therapy  stem cells for replacement  vaccination   ginko biloba Cholinergic hypothesis  cholinergic neurones in basal forebrain project to cortex and hippocampus  muscarinic antagonist, (M1), pirenzipine, causes memory loss in hippocampus  agonists, e.g. physostigmine, improve memory  But other systems interact Cholinergic therapy  Cholinesterase inhibitors – delay symptoms  Tacrine: allosteric – 1993 (toxic in liver)  Donepezil; mixed binding Try Cholinergic agonist  M2 on basal ganglia and intestine  Depletion of M1 receptors?  M1 and M3 receptors in hippocampus  Drug trials discontinued Summary of AD  Full mechanism not known  amyloid hypothesis well – established  role of tau also established  role for glia and neurons  No one effective treatment  cholinotherapy promising ?  Happy Christmas & New Year!