 |
 |

Polyglutamine Diseases and Transport Problems
Deadly Traffic Jams on Neuronal Highways
Shermali Gunawardena, PhD;
Lawrence S. B. Goldstein, PhD
Arch Neurol. 2005;62:46-51.
The expansion of CAG repeats encoding glutamine (polyQ) causes, to date, 9 late-onset progressive neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington disease, spinobulbar muscular atrophy, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, and spinocerebellar ataxias 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, and 17. Although many studies using both knockout and transgenic mouse models suggest that a toxic gain of function is central to neuronal dysfunction, the exact mechanisms of neurotoxic effects remain elusive. Protein aggregations within neurons seem to be a common manifestation in almost all polyQ diseases, and such accumulations are perhaps major triggers of cellular stress and neuronal death. Recent data lead to the tantalizing proposal that disruption of axonal transport pathways within long, narrow-caliber axons could lead to protein accumulations that can elicit neuronal death, ultimately causing a neuronal dysfunction pathway observed in polyQ expanded diseases. Perhaps perturbations in transport pathways are an early event involved in instigating polyQ disease pathology.
Author Affiliations: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla.
CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us Digg Reddit Technorati Twitter
What's this?
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES
 |
Impaired ERAD and ER stress are early and specific events in polyglutamine toxicity
Duennwald and Lindquist
Genes Dev. 2008;22:3308-3319.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
ProBias: a web-server for the identification of user-specified types of compositionally biased segments in protein sequences
Kuznetsov
Bioinformatics 2008;24:1534-1535.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Cardiomyocyte Expression of a Polyglutamine Preamyloid Oligomer Causes Heart Failure
Pattison et al.
Circulation 2008;117:2743-2751.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Expanded-Polyglutamine Huntingtin Protein Suppresses the Secretion and Production of a Chemokine (CCL5/RANTES) by Astrocytes
Chou et al.
J. Neurosci. 2008;28:3277-3290.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
14-3-3 Protein Interacts with Huntingtin-associated Protein 1 and Regulates Its Trafficking
Rong et al.
J. Biol. Chem. 2007;282:4748-4756.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Polyglutamine neurodegenerative diseases and regulation of transcription: assembling the puzzle.
Riley and Orr
Genes Dev. 2006;20:2183-2192.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Regulation of intracellular trafficking of huntingtin-associated protein-1 is critical for TrkA protein levels and neurite outgrowth.
Rong et al.
J. Neurosci. 2006;26:6019-6030.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
|