Motor Neuron Disease/Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) PART II Flashcards

1
Q

Briefly summarise the common molecular pathway hypothesised for ALS

A

Nuclear proteins (TDP-43 + FUS) that mislocalise to cytolsol -(TARDBP/FUS/ageing)-> TDP-43 (+ve), FUS (+ve), ubiquitinated protein aggregates -> neurodegeneration

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2
Q

Genetic relationship between ALS and fronto-temporal dementia (FTD)?

A

[mutation]

Expanded repeats in intron 1 of C9ORF72

[chromosome 9 locus]

NB: non-coding repeat expansions are present for myotonic dystropies, Fragile X, spino-cerebellar ataxias

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3
Q

The most prevalent mutation in FALS?

A

C9ORF72 mutation

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4
Q

Outcomes of C9ORF72 mutation?

A

[unknown function]- likely member of DENN proteins involved in membrane fusion

  • reduced mRNA levels
  • RNA foci accumulate in ALS
  • RAN peptides: bi-directional transcrip/translat of expanded repeat sequences
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5
Q

C9ORF72-specific pathology?

A

p62 +ve cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusions in hippocampus and cerebellum that are TDP-43 positive

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6
Q

Putative mechanism of C9ORF72 pathogenesis?

A

Bi-directional transcription of expanded repeat containing sequences followed by translation of repeat associated non-AUG initiated (RAN) tranlation of aggregate prone dipeptide repeat peptides (DPRs)

NB: Poly GA is the most aggregatable, interfering w/ proteostasis

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7
Q

Relationship between distribution of dipeptide repeat peptides (DPR) and neurodegeneration

A

Degeneration and loss of anterior horn cells occurs in the absence of DPR

[5 DPR species seen in unaffected regions: granule cells of hippocampus and cerebellum]

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8
Q

Compare clinical characteristics of C9orf72 FALS cases with other FALS cases?

A

For C9prf72 FALS:

  • slightly lower age of onset
  • higher co-morbidity w/ FTD
  • slightly reduced survival
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9
Q

FALS genes: overall mechanisms?

A

Protein-quality control (waste disposal)

  1. Unfolded protein response: increases levels of protein chaperones to facilitate folding
  2. Protein degradation via the proteasome and autophagy (via lysosome aggrephagy)
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10
Q

Relevance of VAPB and ALS?

A

VAPB is localised in motor neurons and is decreased in SALS spinal cord

VAPB mutation -> ER fragmentation -> ubiquitinated protein aggregates -> apoptosis

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11
Q

Relevance of P4HB and ALS?

A

P4HB is an ER foldase, induced in ER stress and SALS]- it is a disease modifier/risk factor

Disease will vary between ppl with same mutation: Modifies disease onset/progression/penetrance

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12
Q

Function of ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD) proteins?

A

ER protein export to the proteasome

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13
Q

Superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1): association w/ ALS and mechanism?

A

Associated with ALS 1

Binds to Derlin 1

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14
Q

VCP association w/ ALS and mechanism?

A

Associated w/ ALS14 and IBMPFD (inclusion body myopathy, Paget’s disease, FTD)

Involved in ER protein export to proteasome

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15
Q

Ubiquilin 2 association w/ ALS and mechanism?

A

Associated w X-linked FALS and SALS

Binds to poly-ubi chains and components of proteasome

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16
Q

Define autophagy

A

Aggrephagy of misfolded or aggregated proteins. It’s activated by the failure of proteasomal degradation and molecular chaperones to resolve aggregate buildup

17
Q

Role of P62/SQSTM1?

A

Allelic disorder

is Pagets disease of bone

18
Q

Role of OPTN

A

ALS12 slow
progressing AR/AD
Allelic disorder is primary open
angle glaucoma.

19
Q

What did whole exome sequencing in ALS yield?

A

ID’d a novel ALS gene: TANK-binding Kinase 1 (TBK1)

20
Q

Function of TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK-1)?

A

Phosphorylates OPTN (optineurin) and P62 and proteins involved in innate immunity

Enhances OPTN binding to autophagosome protein LC3 -> autophagic turnover of infectious bacteria (coated w/ ubiquitylated proteins)

21
Q

Implications from the discovery of TBK-1?

A

Strengthens importance of autophagy in ALS pathogenesis

22
Q

Riluzole MOA?

A

Anti-epileptic

Targets VDSC’s and reduces glutamate release

23
Q

What triggers ALS that is specific for motor neurons?

A

Constant excitatory activity (NMDArs) activated by glutamate and D-serine

D-serine is sig. elevated in SALS

24
Q

Function of D-amino acid oxidase (DAO)?

A

High levels of DAO required to metabolise and regulate D-serine levels

25
Q

What is the pathological DAO mutation and what condition does it confer?

A

R199W-DAO

Involved in FALS

26
Q

Effect of R199W-DAO?

A
  • increased ubiquitinated protein aggregates
  • autophagy (increased autophagosomes and LC3-II in motor neuron cell line)
  • significant loss of spinal cord motor neurons (in trans-mice expressing R199WDAO)
27
Q

Overview of clinically effective ALS drugs?

A
  • Riluzole
  • Edaravone]- free radical scavenger used in stroke

[drugs tested aren’t clinically effective in large trials…except riluzole]

28
Q

Edaravone: Pros, Cons and its future?

A

PROS

  • initial study-hint of effect
  • second smaller study- normal resp function after 2 years from diagnosis
  • treated pts declined 5.1 compared to 7.5 control

CONS

  • prev studies show normal decline of 5.6. so 5.1 ain’t that great
  • no effect on severely affected cases

FUTURE: longer studies (over 2 yrs) and test effect on survival

29
Q

ALS treatment, when the causal gene is known?

A
  • targeted gene delivery/deletion using direct delivery of antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) by adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors to neutralise mutation]- SOD1 mutation had intrathecal injection w/ adenovirus gene delivery
  • CRISPR-Cas9 technology to target mutant genes and re-introduce wild-type copies
30
Q

Potential future treatment targets (where the affected pathways are known)?

A

•Motor neuron susceptibility and trigger factors?
•Prevention of nuclear RNA foci (C9orf72 specific)?
•Prevention of cytosolic inclusion formation?
•Up-regulate UPR, UPS, autophagy?
•Upregulate molecular chaperones (HSPs)?
•Reduce D-serine levels?
•Designer Drug treatment: 15,000 patients and
7,500 controls Project MinE (US) to develop basis
for treatment from Whole Genome Sequencing,
metabolomics and proteomic analysis.