Parkinson's Disease and the Gut: Models of an Emerging Relationship

A. Bindas, S. Kulkarni, R. Koppes, A. Koppes
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Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disease characterized by a progressive loss of fine motor function that impacts 1-2 out of 1,000 people. PD occurs predominately late in life and lacks a definitive biomarker for early detection. Recent cross-disciplinary progress has implicated the gut as a potential origin of PD pathogenesis. The gut-origin hypothesis has motivated research on gut PD pathology and transmission to the brain, especially during the prodromal stage (10-20 years before motor symptom onset). Early findings have revealed several possible triggers for Lewy pathology - the pathological hallmark of PD - in the gut, suggesting that microbiome and epithelial interactions may play a greater than appreciated role. But the mechanisms driving Lewy pathology and gut-brain transmission in PD remain unknown. Development of artificial α-Synuclein aggregates (α-Syn preformed fibrils) and animal disease models have recapitulated features of PD progression, enabling for the first time, controlled investigation of the gut-origin hypothesis. However, the role of specific cells in PD transmission, such as neurons, remains limited and requires in vitro models for controlled evaluation and perturbation. Human cell populations, three-dimensional organoids, and microfluidics as discovery platforms inch us closer to improving existing treatment for patients by providing platforms for discovery and screening. This review includes a discussion of PD pathology, conventional treatments, in vivo and in vitro models, and future directions. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Parkinson's Disease remains a common neurodegenerative disease with palliative versus causal treatments. Recently, the gut-origin hypothesis, where Parkinson's disease is thought to originate and spread from the gut to the brain, has gained traction as a field of investigation. However, despite the wealth of studies and innovative approaches to accelerate the field, there remains a need for in vitro tools to enable fundamental biological understanding of disease progression, and compound screening and efficacy. In this review, we present a historical perspective of Parkinson's Disease pathogenesis, detection, and conventional therapy, animal and human models investigating the gut-origin hypothesis, in vitro models to enable controlled discovery, and future outlooks for this blossoming field.
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帕金森氏病和肠道:一种新兴关系的模型
帕金森病(PD)是一种常见的神经退行性疾病,其特征是精细运动功能的进行性丧失,每1000人中就有1-2人患病。帕金森病主要发生在生命晚期,缺乏明确的早期检测生物标志物。最近的跨学科进展暗示肠道是帕金森病发病机制的潜在起源。肠道起源假说推动了肠道PD病理及其向大脑传递的研究,特别是在前驱期(运动症状出现前10-20年)。早期的研究结果揭示了肠道中路易氏病理(PD的病理标志)的几种可能触发因素,表明微生物组和上皮细胞的相互作用可能发挥了更大的作用。但驱动路易病理和PD肠脑传播的机制尚不清楚。人工α-突触核蛋白聚集体(α-Syn预制原纤维)和动物疾病模型的发展再现了PD进展的特征,首次能够对肠道起源假说进行对照研究。然而,特定细胞(如神经元)在PD传递中的作用仍然有限,需要体外模型进行控制评估和扰动。人类细胞群、三维类器官和微流体作为发现平台,通过提供发现和筛选平台,使我们更接近于改善现有的治疗方法。本文综述了PD的病理、常规治疗、体内和体外模型以及未来发展方向。意义声明:帕金森病仍然是一种常见的神经退行性疾病,姑息治疗与因果治疗相比较。最近,肠道起源假说——帕金森病被认为起源于肠道并从肠道传播到大脑——作为一个研究领域获得了关注。然而,尽管有大量的研究和创新方法来加速这一领域的发展,但仍然需要体外工具来实现对疾病进展、化合物筛选和疗效的基本生物学理解。在这篇综述中,我们介绍了帕金森氏病的发病机制、检测和常规治疗的历史观点,研究肠道起源假说的动物和人类模型,实现受控发现的体外模型,以及这一蓬勃发展领域的未来展望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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