808 resultados para Lewy bodies parkinson disease
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Parkinson's disease (PD)-related dementia affects approximately 40% of PD patients and the severity of this dementia correlates significantly with the density of Lewy body (LB) deposition in the PD brain. Aggregated alpha-synuclein protein is the major component of LB's and the non-amyloid component (NAC) region of alpha-synuclein, residues 61-95, is essential for the aggregation and toxicity of this protein. The current study evaluated the effect of pre-aggregated NAC(61-95) injected into the CA3 area of the dorsal hippocampus of the brain on memory in the rat. Previous research has suggested that oxidative stress processes may play a role in the neuropathology of PD, therefore the effect of treatment with vitamin E, an antioxidant, was also evaluated. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were trained in two-lever operant chambers under an alternating-lever cyclic-ratio (ALCR) schedule of food reinforcement. When responding showed no trends, subjects were divided into four groups. Two groups were injected bilaterally into the dorsal hippocampus with aggregated NAC(61-95) (5 mu l suspension), and two groups were injected bilaterally into the dorsal hippocampus with sterile water (5 mu l). Subgroups were treated with either vitamin E (150 mg/kg in Soya oil) or vehicle (Soya oil) daily. Injection of NAC(61-95) induced memory deficits and vitamin E treatment alleviated these. In addition, NAC(61-95) injections induced activated astrocytes and chronic treatment with vitamin E reduced the numbers of activated astrocytes. These results suggest that aggregated NAC(61-95) and associated oxidative stress, may play a role in the pathogenesis of cognitive deficits seen in PD-induced dementia. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Purpose: To investigate clinical, demographic and dietary factors associated with constipation in a sample of community dwelling people with Parkinson's disease, recruited through a specialist outpatient clinic. Partners/carers provided a convenience control group. Scope: Participants completed a baseline questionnaire (background information, diet and exercise, activities of daily living: mobility and manual dexterity, health-related quality of life (SF-12), stool frequency and characteristics, extent of concern due to constipation, laxative taking), and a four-week stool diary. The Rome criterion was used to determine constipation status. Multiple regression methods were used to explore the correlates of constipation. Baseline data were provided by 121 people with Parkinson's, (54 controls), of whom 73% (25%) met the Rome criterion. Prospective diary data from 106 people with Parkinson's (43 controls) showed lower proportions: 35% (7%) meeting the Rome criterion. Among all study subjects, i.e. Parkinson's patients and controls taken together, the presence of constipation is predicted by having Parkinson's disease (p=.003; odds ratio 4.80, 95% CI 1.64-14.04) and mobility score (p=.04; odds ratio 1.15, 95% CI 1.01-1.31), but not by dietary factors. Amongst people with Parkinson's constipation is predicted by number of medications (p=.027). Laxative taking masks constipation, and is significantly associated with wearing protection against bowel incontinence (p=.009; odds ratio 4.80, 95% CI: 1.48-15.52). Conclusions: Constipation is disease-related, not a lifestyle factor. More research is needed on optimal management and laxative use. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.
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Rare mutations in AßPP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 cause uncommon early onset forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD), and common variants in MAPT are associated with risk of other neurodegenerative disorders. We sought to establish whether common genetic variation in these genes confer risk to the common form of AD which occurs later in life (>65 years). We therefore tested single-nucleotide polymorphisms at these loci for association with late-onset AD (LOAD) in a large case-control sample consisting of 3,940 cases and 13,373 controls. Single-marker analysis did not identify any variants that reached genome-wide significance, a result which is supported by other recent genome-wide association studies. However, we did observe a significant association at the MAPT locus using a gene-wide approach (p = 0.009). We also observed suggestive association between AD and the marker rs9468, which defines the H1 haplotype, an extended haplotype that spans the MAPT gene and has previously been implicated in other neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, and corticobasal degeneration. In summary common variants at AßPP, PSEN1, and PSEN2 and MAPT are unlikely to make strong contributions to susceptibility for LOAD. However, the gene-wide effect observed at MAPT indicates a possible contribution to disease risk which requires further study.
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Previous research has shown that Parkinson's disease (PD) patients can increase the speed of their movement when catching a moving ball compared to when reaching for a static ball (Majsak et al., 1998). A recent model proposed by Redgrave et al. (2010) explains this phenomenon with regard to the dichotomic organization of motor loops in the basal ganglia circuitry and the role of sensory micro-circuitries in the control of goal-directed actions. According to this model, external visual information that is relevant to the required movement can induce a switch from a habitual control of movement toward an externally-paced, goal-directed form of guidance, resulting in augmented motor performance (Bienkiewicz et al., 2013). In the current study, we investigated whether continuous acoustic information generated by an object in motion can enhance motor performance in an arm reaching task in a similar way to that observed in the studies of Majsak et al. (1998, 2008). In addition, we explored whether the kinematic aspects of the movement are regulated in accordance with time to arrival information generated by the ball's motion as it reaches the catching zone. A group of 7 idiopathic PD (6 male, 1 female) patients performed a ball-catching task where the acceleration (and hence ball velocity) was manipulated by adjusting the angle of the ramp. The type of sensory information (visual and/or auditory) specifying the ball's arrival at the catching zone was also manipulated. Our results showed that patients with PD demonstrate improved motor performance when reaching for a ball in motion, compared to when stationary. We observed how PD patients can adjust their movement kinematics in accordance with the speed of a moving target, even if vision of the target is occluded and patients have to rely solely on auditory information. We demonstrate that the availability of dynamic temporal information is crucial for eliciting motor improvements in PD. Furthermore, these effects appear independent from the sensory modality through-which the information is conveyed.
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Gait disturbances are a common feature of Parkinson’s disease, one of the most severe being freezing of gait. Sensory cueing is a common method used to facilitate stepping in people with Parkinson’s. Recent work has shown that, compared to walking to a metronome, Parkinson’s patients without freezing of gait (nFOG) showed reduced gait variability when imitating recorded sounds of footsteps made on gravel. However, it is not known if these benefits are realised through the continuity of the acoustic information or the action-relevance. Furthermore, no study has examined if these benefits extend to PD with freezing of gait. We prepared four different auditory cues (varying in action-relevance and acoustic continuity) and asked 19 Parkinson’s patients (10 nFOG, 9 with freezing of gait (FOG)) to step in place to each cue. Results showed a superiority of action-relevant cues (regardless of cue-continuity) for inducing reductions in Step coefficient of variation (CV). Acoustic continuity was associated with a significant reduction in Swing CV. Neither cue-continuity nor action-relevance was independently sufficient to increase the time spent stepping before freezing. However, combining both attributes in the same cue did yield significant improvements. This study demonstrates the potential of using action-sounds as sensory cues for Parkinson’s patients with freezing of gait. We suggest that the improvements shown might be considered audio-motor ‘priming’ (i.e., listening to the sounds of footsteps will engage sensorimotor circuitry relevant to the production of that same action, thus effectively bypassing the defective basal ganglia).
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A maioria das funções celulares, incluindo expressão de genes, crescimento e proliferação celulares, metabolismo, morfologia, motilidade, comunicação intercelular e apoptose, é regulada por interações proteína-proteína (IPP). A célula responde a uma variedade de estímulos, como tal a expressão de proteínas é um processo dinâmico e os complexos formados são constituídos transitoriamente mudando de acordo com o seu ciclo funcional, adicionalmente, muitas proteínas são expressas de uma forma dependente do tipo de célula. Em qualquer instante a célula pode conter cerca de centenas de milhares de IPPs binárias, e encontrar os companheiros de interação de uma proteína é um meio de inferir a sua função. Alterações em redes de IPP podem também fornecer informações acerca de mecanismos de doença. O método de identificação binário mais frequentemente usado é o sistema Dois Hibrido de Levedura, adaptado para rastreio em larga escala. Esta metodologia foi aqui usada para identificar os interactomas específicos de isoforma da Proteína Fosfatase 1 (PP1), em cérebro humano. A PP1 é uma proteína fosfatase de Ser/Thr envolvida numa grande variedade de vias e eventos celulares. É uma proteína conservada codificada por três genes, que originam as isoformas α, β, e γ, com a última a originar γ1 e γ2 por splicing alternativo. As diferentes isoformas da PP1 são reguladas pelos companheiros de interação – proteínas que interagem com a PP1 (PIPs). A natureza modular dos complexos da PP1, bem como a sua associação combinacional, gera um largo reportório de complexos reguladores e papéis em circuitos de sinalização celular. Os interactomas da PP1 específicos de isofoma, em cérebro, foram aqui descritos, com um total de 263 interações identificadas e integradas com os dados recolhidos de várias bases de dados de IPPs. Adicionalmente, duas PIPs foram selecionadas para uma caracterização mais aprofundada da interação: Taperina e Sinfilina-1A. A Taperina é uma proteína ainda pouco descrita, descoberta recentemente como sendo uma PIP. A sua interação com as diferentes isoformas da PP1 e localização celulares foram analisadas. Foi descoberto que a Taperina é clivada e que está presente no citoplasma, membrana e núcleo e que aumenta os níveis de PP1, em células HeLa. Na membrana ela co-localiza com a PP1 e a actina e uma forma mutada da Taperina, no motivo de ligação à PP1, está enriquecida no núcleo, juntamente com a actina. Mais, foi descoberto que a Taperina é expressa em testículo e localiza-se na região acrossómica da cabeça do espermatozoide, uma estrutura onde a PP1 e a actina estão também presentes. A Sinfilina-1A, uma isoforma da Sinfilina-1, é uma proteína com tendência para agregar e tóxica, envolvida na doença de Parkinson. Foi mostrado que a Sinfilina-1A liga às isoformas da PP1, por co-transformação em levedura, e que mutação do seu motivo de ligação à PP1 diminuiu significativamente a interação, num ensaio de overlay. Quando sobre-expressa em células Cos-7, a Sinfilina-1A formou corpos de inclusão onde a PP1 estava presente, no entanto a forma mutada da Sinfilina-1A também foi capaz de agregar, indicando que a formação de inclusões não foi dependente de ligação à PP1. Este trabalho dá uma nova perspetiva dos interactomas da PP1, incluindo a identificação de dezenas de companheiros de ligação específicos de isoforma, e enfatiza a importância das PIPs, não apenas na compreensão das funções celulares da PP1 mas também, como alvos de intervenção terapêutica.
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Tese de mestrado, Neurociências, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014
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Urocortin (Ucn 1), a 40 amino acid long peptide related to corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) was discovered 19 years ago, based on its sequence homology to the parent molecule. Its existence was inferred in the CNS because of anatomical and pharmacological discrepancies between CRF and its two receptor subtypes. Although originally found in the brain, where it has opposing actions to CRF and therefore confers stress-coping mechanisms, Ucn 1 has subsequently been found throughout the periphery including heart, lung, skin, and immune cells. It is now well established that this small peptide is involved in a multitude of physiological and pathophysiological processes, due to its receptor subtype distribution and promiscuity in second messenger signalling pathways. As a result of extensive studies in this field, there are now well over one thousand peer reviewed publications involving Ucn 1. In this review, we intend to highlight some of the less well known actions of Ucn 1 and in particular its role in neuronal cell protection and maintenance of the skeletal system, both by conventional methods of reviewing the literature and using bioinformatics, to highlight further associations between Ucn 1 and disease conditions. Understanding how Ucn 1 works in these tissues, will help to unravel its role in normal and pathophysiological processes. This would ultimately allow the generation of putative medical interventions for the alleviation of important diseases such as Parkinson's disease, arthritis, and osteoporosis.
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Introdução: A sequência de movimento de sentado para de pé (SPP) exige um elevado controlo postural (CP). Em indivíduos com doença de Parkinson (DP), os circuitos que envolvem os ajustes posturais antecipatórios (APA’s) parecem estar afetados, refletindo-se numa diminuição do CP com repercussões nesta sequência de movimento. Objetivo: Avaliar o comportamento dos APA’s na tibio-társica na sequência de movimento SPP em indivíduos com DP. Métodos: Recorreu-se ao estudo de 4 casos com DP, com tempo de evolução entre os 3 e 17 anos, objeto de uma intervenção de fisioterapia baseada nos princípios do Conceito de Bobath durante 12 semanas. Antes (M0) e após (M1) a intervenção procedeu-se ao registo eletromiográfico dos músculos tibial anterior (TA) e solear (SOL) bilateralmente e durante a sequência de SPP. Adicionalmente foram também utilizadas a Escala de Equilíbrio de Berg, a Modified Falls Efficacy Scale (MFES) e a Classificação Internacional de Funcionalidade (CIF), para, indiretamente, averiguar o impacto funcional da reorganização dos APA’s. Resultados: Em M0 os resultados sugerem uma diminuição APA’s, uma vez que se observou: 1) diferentes tempos de ativação do TA e do SOL entre membros e 2) uma ativação prévia do SOL ao TA para os participantes A, C e D. Em M1, observou-se uma aproximação ao comtemplado para os APA’s para a maioria dos indivíduos. Os resultados na escala de Berg e MFES, de M0 para M1, sugerem um aumento do equilíbrio e da capacidade de confiança na maioria dos participantes (A, 21/42 pontos, B manteve a pontuação final 31 pontos, C, 50/54 pontos e D 45/53 pontos na escala de Berg; A, 30/43 pontos, B, 21/18 pontos, C, 70/68 pontos e D, 40/64 pontos na MFES;). Também se observaram melhorias nas atividades e participação da CIF. Conclusão: nos indivíduos em estudo verificou-se, de uma forma geral, uma modificação no sentido da aproximação do período comtemplado para os APA’s, em M1. Nos sujeitos A, C, e D verificou-se uma modificação do tempo de activação do SOL em função da actividade do TA em M1. No individuo B, à esquerda não se verificou o mesmo comportamento, verificou-se a activação inversa do SOL ao TA.
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Introdução: O padrão de recrutamento temporal inerente a uma sequência de ativação muscular (SAM), permite a organização multi-segmentar para a realização de uma tarefa motora. Este depende da conexão neural entre estruturas corticais e sub-corticais, incluindo os núcleos da base (NB), podendo, assim, estar comprometido em indivíduos com Doença de Parkinson (DP). As SAM poderão ser melhoradas através de uma intervenção baseada no conceito de Bobath (CB). Objetivo: Estudar o potencial da intervenção, baseada no CB, a longo prazo, nas SAM ao nível da tibio-társica (TT), durante as tarefas motoras sit-to-stand (SitTS) e o stand-to-sit (StandTS), em quatro indivíduos com DP. Metodologia: O estudo apresenta quatro casos de indivíduos com DP, que realizaram intervenção em fisioterapia baseada no CB, durante 12 semanas. Antes e após a intervenção, foram avaliadas as sequências de ativação do gastrocnémio medial (GM), do solear (SOL) e do tibial anterior (TA), durante as tarefas SitTS e StandTS, recorrendo à eletromiografia de superfície e à plataforma de forças, para a divisão cinética das diferentes fases das tarefas. Avaliou-se ainda o equilíbrio funcional, através da Escala de Berg, e a percepção subjetiva dos indivíduos acerca da sua capacidade para realizar atividades sem cair, através da Modified Falls Efficacy Scale. Resultados: Após a intervenção, os indivíduos em estudo apresentaram, na sua maioria, uma diminuição da co-ativação muscular, bem como um aumento do equilíbrio funcional e diminuição da probabilidade de risco de queda, refletindo uma melhoria do controlo postural (CP). As modificações na percepção subjetiva dos indivíduos acerca da sua capacidade para realizar atividades sem cair não foram homogéneas. Conclusão: A intervenção baseada no CB teve efeitos positivos do ponto de vista do CP nos quatro indivíduos com DP. Pensa-se que uma intervenção mais duradoura poderá intensificar as melhorias observadas.
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When emerging from the ribosomes, new polypeptides need to fold properly, eventually translocate, and then assemble into stable, yet functionally flexible complexes. During their lifetime, native proteins are often exposed to stresses that can partially unfold and convert them into stably misfolded and aggregated species, which can in turn cause cellular damage and propagate to other cells. In animal cells, especially in aged neurons, toxic aggregates may accumulate, induce cell death and lead to tissue degeneration via different mechanisms, such as apoptosis as in Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases and aging in general. The main cellular mechanisms effectively controlling protein homeostasis in youth and healthy adulthood are: (1) the molecular chaperones, acting as aggregate unfolding and refolding enzymes, (2) the chaperone-gated proteases, acting as aggregate unfolding and degrading enzymes, (3) the aggresomes, acting as aggregate compacting machineries, and (4) the autophagosomes, acting as aggregate degrading organelles. For unclear reasons, these cellular defences become gradually incapacitated with age, leading to the onset of degenerative diseases. Understanding these mechanisms and the reasons for their incapacitation in late adulthood is key to the design of new therapies against the progression of aging, degenerative diseases and cancers.
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This study examined how perturbation-evoked compensatory arm reactions in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) are influenced by explicit verbal instruction. Ten individuals with PD and 15 older adults without PD responded to surface translations with or without specific instruction to reach for and grasp the handrail. Electromyographic (EMG) and kinematic recordings were taken from the reaching arm. Results showed that individuals with and without PD benefitted similarly from explicit instruction. Explicit instruction resulted in earlier (p=0.005) and larger (p<0.001) medial deltoid EMG responses in comparison to no specific instructions. Compensatory arm reactions also occurred with a higher peak medio-lateral wrist velocity (p<0.001) and higher peak shoulder abduction angular velocity (p<0.001) with explicit instruction. Explicit instruction positively influenced compensatory arm reactions in individuals with and without PD. Future research is needed to determine whether the benefits of instruction persist over time and translate to a loss of balance in real life.
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Understanding the relationship between genetic diseases and the genes associated with them is an important problem regarding human health. The vast amount of data created from a large number of high-throughput experiments performed in the last few years has resulted in an unprecedented growth in computational methods to tackle the disease gene association problem. Nowadays, it is clear that a genetic disease is not a consequence of a defect in a single gene. Instead, the disease phenotype is a reflection of various genetic components interacting in a complex network. In fact, genetic diseases, like any other phenotype, occur as a result of various genes working in sync with each other in a single or several biological module(s). Using a genetic algorithm, our method tries to evolve communities containing the set of potential disease genes likely to be involved in a given genetic disease. Having a set of known disease genes, we first obtain a protein-protein interaction (PPI) network containing all the known disease genes. All the other genes inside the procured PPI network are then considered as candidate disease genes as they lie in the vicinity of the known disease genes in the network. Our method attempts to find communities of potential disease genes strongly working with one another and with the set of known disease genes. As a proof of concept, we tested our approach on 16 breast cancer genes and 15 Parkinson's Disease genes. We obtained comparable or better results than CIPHER, ENDEAVOUR and GPEC, three of the most reliable and frequently used disease-gene ranking frameworks.
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La maladie de Parkinson (MP) est une affection neurodégénérative invalidante et incurable. Il est maintenant clairement établi que d’importants déterminants génétiques prédisposent à son apparition. La recherche génétique sur des formes familiales de la MP a mené à la découverte d’un minimum de six gènes causatifs (SNCA, LRRK2, Parkin, PINK1, DJ-1 and GBA) et certains, par exemple LRRK2, contiennent des variations génétiques qui prédisposent également aux formes sporadiques. La caractérisation des protéines codées par ces gènes a mené à une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes moléculaires sousjacents. Toutefois, en dépit de ces efforts, les causes menant à l’apparition de la MP restent inconnues pour la majorité des patients. L’objectif général des présents travaux était d’identifier des mutations prédisposant à la MP dans la population canadienne-française du Québec à partir d’une cohorte composée principalement de patients sporadiques. Le premier volet de ce projet consistait à déterminer la présence de mutations de LRRK2 dans notre cohorte en séquençant directement les exons contenant la majorité des mutations pathogéniques et en effectuant une étude d’association. Nous n’avons identifié aucune mutation et l’étude d’association s’est avérée négative, suggérant ainsi que LRRK2 n’est pas une cause significative de la MP dans la population canadienne-française. La deuxième partie du projet avait pour objectif d’identifier de nouveaux gènes causatifs en séquençant directement des gènes candidats choisis à cause de leurs implications dans différents mécanismes moléculaires sous-tendant la MP. Notre hypothèse de recherche était basée sur l’idée que la MP est principalement due à des mutations individuellement rares dans un grand nombre de gènes différents. Nous avons identifié des mutations rares dans les gènes PICK1 et MFN1. Le premier code pour une protéine impliquée dans la régulation de la transmission du glutamate tandis que le second est un des acteurs-clés du processus de fusion mitochondriale. Nos résultats, qui devront être répliqués, suggèrent que le séquençage à grande échelle pourrait être une méthode prometteuse d’élucidation des facteurs de prédisposition génétiques à la MP ; ils soulignent l’intérêt d’utiliser une population fondatrice comme les canadiens-français pour ce type d’étude et devraient permettre d’approfondir les connaissances sur la pathogénèse moléculaire de la MP.