The search for treatments for neurodegenerative diseases is a major concern in light of today's aging population and an increasing burden on individuals, families, and society. Although great advances have been made in the last decades to understand the underlying genetic and biological cause of these diseases, only some symptomatic treatments are available. Metformin has long since been used to treat Type 2 Diabetes and has been shown to be beneficial in several other conditions. Metformin is well-tested in vitro and in vivo and an approved compound that targets diverse pathways including mitochondrial energy production and insulin signaling. There is growing evidence for the benefits of metformin to counteract age-related diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative diseases. We will discuss evidence showing that certain neurodegenerative diseases and diabetes are explicitly linked and that metformin along with other diabetes drugs can reduce neurological symptoms in some patients and reduce disease phenotypes in animal and cell models. An interesting therapeutic factor might be how metformin is able to balance survival and death signaling in cells through pathways that are commonly associated with neurodegenerative diseases. In healthy neurons, these overarching signals keep energy metabolism, oxidative stress, and proteostasis in check, avoiding the dysfunction and neuronal death that defines neurodegenerative disease. We will discuss the biological mechanisms involved and the relevance of neuronal vulnerability and potential difficulties for future trials and development of therapies.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder and new putative disease genes are discovered constantly. Therefore, whole-exome sequencing could be an efficient approach to genetic testing in PD. To evaluate its performance in early-onset sporadic PD, we performed diagnostic exome sequencing in 80 individuals with manifestation of PD symptoms at age 40 or earlier and a negative family history of PD. Variants in validated and candidate disease genes and risk factors for PD and atypical Parkinson syndromes were annotated, followed by further analysis for selected variants. We detected pathogenic variants in Mendelian genes in 6.25% of cases and high-impact risk factor variants in GBA in 5% of cases, resulting in overall maximum diagnostic yield of 11.25%. One individual was compound heterozygous for variants affecting canonical splice sites in VPS13C, confirming the causal role of protein-truncating variants in this gene linked to autosomal-recessive early-onset PD. Despite the low diagnostic yield of exome sequencing in sporadic early-onset PD, the confirmation of the recently discovered VPS13C gene highlights its advantage over using predefined gene panels.
BackgroundNeurofilament light protein is an unspecific biofluid marker that reflects the extent of neuronal/axonal damage and thereby offers the chance monitor disease severity and progression. The objective of this study was to investigate cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of neurofilament light protein in Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients with clinical trajectories of motor and cognitive function longitudinally.MethodsCSF neurofilament light protein levels were assessed in 371 PDsporadic, 126 genetic PD patients (91 PDGBA, 8 PDLRRK2, 21 PDPRKN/PINK1/DJ1_heterozygous, 6 PDPRKN/PINK1/DJ1_homozygous), and 71 healthy controls. Participants were followed up longitudinally for up to 8 years.ResultsAt baseline, mean CSF neurofilament light protein levels were highest in PD patients with cognitive impairment (Montreal Cognitive Assessment score ≤ 25; 1207 pg/mL) but also higher in PD patients with normal cognitive function (757 pg/mL) compared with healthy controls (593 pg/mL; P ≤ 0.001). In healthy controls and in PD patients older age was associated with higher CSF levels of neurofilament light protein (P ≤ 0.001). In PD patients, male gender, older age at onset, longer disease duration, higher Hoehn and Yahr stages, higher UPDRS‐III scores, and lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores were associated with higher CSF levels of neurofilament light protein (P < 0.01). In patients who developed cognitive impairment during study, CSF neurofilament light protein levels prior to conversion to cognitive impairment were not significantly different compared with CSF neurofilament light protein levels of patients who remained cognitively normal.ConclusionsIncreased CSF levels of neurofilament light protein are associated with cognitive decline and motor impairment in PD. However, this increase seems not a very early event and does not mark the conversion to cognitive impairment beforehand. Therefore, the predictive value needs to be discussed critically. © 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
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