Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0752347 (Dementia with Lewy bodies)
1,653 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The precursor of the non-Abeta component of Alzheimer's disease amyloid (NACP) (also known as a-synuclein) is a presynaptic terminal molecule that accumulates in the plaques of Alzheimer's disease. Recent studies have shown that a mutation in NACP is associated with familial Parkinson's disease, and that Lewy bodies are immunoreactive with antibodies against this molecule. To clarify the patterns of accumulation and differences in abnormal compartmentalization, we studied NACP immunoreactivity using double immunolabeling and laser scanning confocal microscopy in the cortex of patients with various neurodegenerative disorders. In Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's disease, diffuse Lewy body disease, and Parkinson's disease, NACP was found to immunolabel cortical Lewy bodies, abnormal neurites, and dystrophic neurites in the plaques. Double-labeling studies showed that all three of these neuropathological structures also contained ubiquitin, synaptophysin, and neurofilament (but not tau) immunoreactivity. In contrast, neurofibrillary tangles, neuropil threads, Pick bodies, ballooned neurons, and glial tangles (most of which were tau positive) were NACP negative. These results support the view that NACP specifically accumulates in diseases related to Lewy bodies such as Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's disease, diffuse Lewy body disease, and Parkinson's disease and suggests a role for this synaptic protein in the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration.
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PMID:Abnormal accumulation of NACP/alpha-synuclein in neurodegenerative disorders. 946 62

Despite being considered the archetypal non-genetic neurological disorder, genetic analysis of Parkinson's disease has shown that there are at least three genetic loci. Furthermore, these analyses have suggested that the phenotype of the pathogenic loci is wider than simple Parkinson's disease and may include Lewy body dementia and some forms of essential tremor. Identification of alpha-synuclein as the first of the loci involved in Parkinson's disease and the identification of this protein in pathological deposits in other disorders has led to the suggestion that it may share pathogenic mechanisms with multiple system atrophy, Alzheimer's disease and prion disease and that these mechanisms are related to a synuclein pathway to cell death. Finally, genetic analysis of the synuclein diseases and the tau diseases may indicate that this synuclein pathway is an alternative to the tau pathway to cell death.
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PMID:The genetics of disorders with synuclein pathology and parkinsonism. 1046 43

Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a sporadic neurodegenerative disease characterized clinically by varying degrees of Parkinsonism, cerebellar ataxia and autonomic dysfunction and pathologically by degeneration in the substantia nigra, putamen, olivary nucleus, pontine nuclei and cerebellum. In addition to selective neuronal loss, iron pigment accumulation and gliosis, myelin pathology is increasingly recognized. In affected white matter, myelin displays signs of degeneration and oligodendroglia contain argyrophilic inclusion bodies, so-called glial cytoplasmic inclusions (GCI). GCI are composed of 10-15-nm diameter coated filaments that are immunoreactive for ubiquitin and alpha-synuclein. Similar inclusions are occasionally found in neuronal cell bodies and cell processes in MSA. Given the presence of inclusion bodies composed of synuclein, it is reasonable to assume that biochemical alterations would be detected in synuclein in MSA and indeed this is the case. In MSA synuclein has biophysical properties that suggest increasing insolubility such as sedimentation in dense fractions in sucrose gradients and ready extraction into detergents and formic acid. Surprisingly, these biochemical modifications in synuclein are more widespread in the brain that the obvious pathology and suggest a fundamental molecular characteristic of the disorder. Similar neuronal, and less frequently glial, inclusions are detected in Lewy body disease, where there is also evidence for biophysical alterations in synuclein. Thus, MSA and LBD are both synucleinopathies, and they may comprise different poles of a disease spectrum that includes sporadic disorders as well as genetically determined disorders such as familial Lewy body Parkinsonism.
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PMID:Multiple system atrophy: a sporadic synucleinopathy. 1051 10

The identification of the alpha-synuclein gene on chromosome 4q as a locus for familial Lewy-body parkinsonism and of alpha-synuclein as a component of Lewy bodies has heralded a new era in the study of Parkinson's disease. We have identified a large family with Lewy body parkinsonism linked to a novel locus on chromosome 4p15 that does not have a mutation in the alpha-synuclein gene. Here we report the clinical and neuropathological findings in an individual from this family and describe unusual high molecular weight alpha-synuclein-immunoreactive proteins in brain homogenates from brain regions with the most marked neuropathology. Distinctive histopathology was revealed with alpha-synuclein immunostaining, including pleomorphic Lewy bodies, synuclein-positive glial inclusions and widespread, severe neuritic dystrophy. We also discuss the relationship of this familial disorder to a Lewy body disease clinical spectrum, ranging from Parkinson's disease to dementia with psychosis.
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PMID:Distinctive neuropathology revealed by alpha-synuclein antibodies in hereditary parkinsonism and dementia linked to chromosome 4p. 1086

Proteasomal dysfunction has been recently implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease and diffuse Lewy body disease. We have developed an in vitro model of proteasomal dysfunction by applying pharmacological inhibitors of the proteasome, lactacystin or ZIE[O-tBu]-A-leucinal (PSI), to dopaminergic PC12 cells. Proteasomal inhibition caused a dose-dependent increase in death of both naive and neuronally differentiated PC12 cells, which could be prevented by caspase inhibition or CPT-cAMP. A percentage of the surviving cells contained discrete cytoplasmic ubiquitinated inclusions, some of which also contained synuclein-1, the rat homologue of human alpha-synuclein. However the total level of synuclein-1 was not altered by proteasomal inhibition. The ubiquitinated inclusions were present only within surviving cells, and their number was increased if cell death was prevented. We have thus replicated, in this model system, the two cardinal pathological features of Lewy body diseases, neuronal death and the formation of cytoplasmic ubiquitinated inclusions. Our findings suggest that inclusion body formation and cell death may be dissociated from one another.
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PMID:Proteasomal inhibition leads to formation of ubiquitin/alpha-synuclein-immunoreactive inclusions in PC12 cells. 1152 Sep 10

The main objective of this study was to determine if levels of alpha-, beta- and/or gamma-synuclein mRNAs are differentially affected in brains of Lewy body disease (LBD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, compared to controls. In control cases, highest levels of expression were observed in the neocortex and the lowest in basal ganglia and substantia nigra. beta-Synuclein was the most abundant message (75-80%), followed by gamma-synuclein (10-15%) and alpha-synuclein (8-10%). Analysis of the superior temporal cortex, a region selectively affected in LBD and AD, showed that compared to controls, levels of alpha-synuclein were increased in cases of diffuse LBD (DLBD), levels of beta-synuclein were decreased in AD and DLBD, and levels of gamma-synuclein were increased in AD cases. This study suggests that a critical balance among products of the synuclein gene is important to maintain normal brain function and that alterations in this balance might be associated with neurodegenerative disorders.
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PMID:Altered expression of the synuclein family mRNA in Lewy body and Alzheimer's disease. 1157 96

Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disease, and results from loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. The aggregation and fibrillation of alpha-synuclein in the form of intracellular proteinaceous aggregates (Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites) have been implicated as a causative factor in this disease, as well as in several other neurodegenerative disorders, including dementia with Lewy bodies, Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's disease, multiple system atrophy and Hallervorden-Spatz disease. Thus, the aggregated forms of alpha-synuclein play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of the synucleinopathies. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying alpha-synuclein aggregation into specific filamentous inclusions remained unknown until recently. Data on the aggregation and fibrillation properties of human alpha-, beta- and gamma-synucleins, mouse alpha-synuclein and familial Parkinson's disease mutants of human alpha-synuclein (A30P and A53T) are analyzed in order to shed light on the amino acid determinants of synuclein aggregation.
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PMID:Amino acid determinants of alpha-synuclein aggregation: putting together pieces of the puzzle. 1209 10

alpha-Synuclein accumulation plays an important role in the pathogenesis of Lewy body disease (LBD) and Parkinson's disease (PD). Although the mechanisms are not yet clear, it is possible that dysregulation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) might play a role. As caveolins form scaffolds onto which signaling molecules such as ERK can assemble, we propose that signaling alterations associated with alpha-synuclein accumulation and neurodegeneration, might be mediated via caveolae. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to investigate the potential contribution of alterations in the caveolar system in mediating alpha-synuclein effects on the ERK signaling pathway. For this, synuclein-transfected B103 neuroblastoma cells were used as a model system. In this cell line, caveolin-1 expression was up-regulated, whereas, ERK was down-regulated. ERK was weakly but consistently co-immunoprecipitated with alpha-synuclein but caveolin-1 did not co-immunoprecipitate with alpha-synuclein. Moreover, treatment of alpha-synuclein- overexpressing cells with caveolin-1 antisense oligonucleotides resulted in stimulation of ERK activity, with amelioration of the neuritic alterations. Transduction of alpha-synuclein-overexpressing cells, with an adenoviral vector directing the expression of ERK, resulted in suppression of caveolin-1 expression and re-establishment of the normal patterns of neurite outgrowth. These results suggest that alpha-synuclein may also interfere with ERK signaling by dysregulating caveolin-1 expression. Thus, the caveolin-1/ERK pathway could be a therapeutic target for the alpha-synuclein-related neurodegenerative disorders.
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PMID:Alpha-synuclein up-regulates expression of caveolin-1 and down-regulates extracellular signal-regulated kinase activity in B103 neuroblastoma cells: role in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. 1278 66

Olfactory dysfunction increases with disease severity in Alzheimer's disease (AD), is early and independent of disease severity in Parkinson's disease (PD), but is absent in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal degeneration (CBD). Previous histopathologic studies of olfactory bulbs in AD have shown neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and senile plaques while Lewy bodies (LBs) have been described in PD. Little is known about olfactory bulb pathology in PSP and CBD. Tau and alpha-synuclein pathology was assessed with immunohistochemistry in olfactory bulbs of AD (N=15), Lewy body disease (LBD; N=10), LBD with concurrent AD (AD/LBD; N=19), PSP (N=27), CBD (N=3) and cases with no significant neurodegenerative pathology (NSP; N=15). The Braak NFT stage, counts of senile plaques and NFT in cortical and hippocampal sections, and counts of LBs in amygdala and cortical sections were recorded for each case. Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotypes were determined on DNA prepared from frozen brain tissue. All AD and AD/LBD cases and nine of 10 LBD cases had tau pathology in the anterior olfactory nucleus (AON), but it was uncommon in PSP (9/27), CBD (0/3) and NSP (5/15). Multiple linear regression analysis demonstrated that tau pathology in the AON correlated with Braak stage (P<0.001), cortical LB counts (P<0.001), as well as APOE epsilon4. Tau pathology is common in the olfactory bulb of AD and LBD but is minimal or absent in PSP and CBD. It correlates with APOE epsilon4, severity of tau pathology in the brain and surprisingly with cortical and amygdala LBs, suggesting a possible synergistic effect between tau and synuclein in the AON in cases with both pathologic processes.
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PMID:Tau pathology in the olfactory bulb correlates with Braak stage, Lewy body pathology and apolipoprotein epsilon4. 1450 42

Diffuse Lewy body disease (DLBD) is a degenerative disease of the nervous system, involving the brain stem, diencephalic nuclei and cerebral cortex, associated with abnormal a-synuclein aggregation and widespread formation of Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites. DLBD presents as pure forms (DLBDp) or in association with Alzheimer disease (AD) in the common forms (DLBDc). Several neurotransmitter abnormalities have been reported including those of the nigrostriatal and mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system, and central noradrenergic, serotoninergic and cholinergic pathways. The present work examines metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) expression and signaling in the frontal cortex of DLBDp and DLBDc cases in comparison with age-matched controls. Abnormal L-[3H]glutamate specific binding to group I and II mGluRs, and abnormal mGluR1 levels have been found in DLBD. This is associated with reduced expression levels of phospholipase C beta1 (PLCbeta1), the effector of group I mGluRs following protein G activation upon glutamate binding. Additional modification in the solubility of PLCbeta1 and reduced PLCbeta1 activity in pure and common DLBD further demonstrates for the first time abnormal mGluR signaling in the cerebral cortex in DLBD. In order to look for a possible link between abnormal mGluR signaling and a-synuclein accumulation in DLBD, immunoprecipitation studies have shown alpha-synuclein/PLCbeta1 binding in controls and decreased alpha-synuclein/PLCbeta1 binding in DLBD. This is accompanied by a shift in the distribution of a-synuclein, but not of PLCbeta1, in DLBD when compared with controls. Together, these results support the concept that abnormal a-synuclein in DLBD produces functional effects on cortical glutamatergic synapses, which are associated with reduced alpha-synuclein/PLCbeta1 interactions, and, therefore, that mGluRs are putative pharmacological targets in DLBD. Finally, these results emphasize the emergence of a functional neuropathology that has to be explored for a better understanding of the effects of abnormal protein interactions in degenerative diseases of the nervous system.
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PMID:Abnormal metabotropic glutamate receptor expression and signaling in the cerebral cortex in diffuse Lewy body disease is associated with irregular alpha-synuclein/phospholipase C (PLCbeta1) interactions. 1560 86


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