8/10/2020
Sniffing Out Parkinson's Disease
Study Finds Parkinson's Disease May Arise From Immune Molecule
It鈥檚 a curious fact that Parkinson鈥檚 disease 鈥 a condition characterized by the inability to initiate or control movements 鈥 often begins with the inability to detect odors. Ning Quan, Ph.D., professor of biomedical science in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, said he thinks the basis for this loss may lie with molecules that communicate inflammation to the brain.
Years ago, researchers uncovered the fact that Parkinson鈥檚 disease (PD) in some patients arises from a genetic mutation that produces a toxic form of the protein alpha-synuclein. Mutant alpha-synuclein proteins clump up in tangles that can travel to areas of the brain that produce dopamine, a chemical that neurons use to regulate movement and motivation. There the toxic alpha synuclein proteins kill the dopamine-producing neurons, the basis for the disease.
But only a few Parkinson鈥檚 patients inherit a mutated alpha-synuclein gene. Haichen Niu, Ph.D., a collaborator of Quan鈥檚, who runs a lab at the Xuzhou Medical College in China, wondered how these individuals acquire PD. Noting that the disorder can begin with an inability to smell, Niu hypothesized that the entire process could be kicked off by inhaling something toxic 鈥攎aybe a virus, maybe an allergen, maybe air pollution 鈥 which inflames brain olfactory neurons. Niu reasoned that this inflammation might stimulate the production and clumping of alpha-synuclein, which might then travel to the area of the brain where dopamine neurons are located and kill them, resulting in PD.
To test his hypothesis, Quan said Niu and his team nasally administered a fever-inducing molecule to mice, then examined changes in their brains six weeks later. The studies revealed that nasal inflammation activated the production of an immune molecule, called interleukin-1, which caused the alpha-synuclein to clump. These clumps were also found to have traveled to the dopamine-producing area of the brain, killing the dopamine neurons. These findings suggest that nasal inflammation may contribute to loss of a sense of smell in Parkinson鈥檚 patients and, more importantly, play an important role in damaging the dopamine neurons that produce Parkinson鈥檚 disease.
鈥淚f interleukin-1 plays a role, then it鈥檚 not unreasonable to think that in the future, we may be able to prevent the development of Parkinson鈥檚 disease if detected in its earliest stages by giving patients a drug like Anakinra, which blocks the actions of interleukin-1, and which is already FDA- approved for the treatment of juvenile arthritis,鈥 said Quan, a co-investigator on Niu鈥檚 recently published study in Brain Pathology.
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