TY - JOUR A1 - Lepeta, Katarzyna A1 - Lourenco, Mychael V. A1 - Schweitzer, Barbara C. A1 - Martino Adami, Pamela V. A1 - Banerjee, Priyanjalee A1 - Catuara-Solarz, Silvina A1 - de la Fuente Revenga, Mario A1 - Marc Guillem, Alain A1 - Haider, Mouna A1 - Ijomone, Omamuyovwi M. A1 - Nadorp, Bettina A1 - Qi, Lin A1 - Perera, Nirma D. A1 - Refsgaard, Louise K. A1 - Reid, Kimberley M. A1 - Sabbar, Mariam A1 - Sahoo, Arghyadip A1 - Schaefer, Natascha A1 - Sheean, Rebecca K. A1 - Suska, Anna A1 - Verma, Rajkumar A1 - Vicidomini, Cinzia A1 - Wright, Dean A1 - Zhang, Xing-Ding A1 - Seidenbecher, Constanze T1 - Synaptopathies: synaptic dysfunction in neurological disorders - a review from students to students JF - Journal of Neurochemistry N2 - Synapses are essential components of neurons and allow information to travel coordinately throughout the nervous system to adjust behavior to environmental stimuli and to control body functions, memories, and emotions. Thus, optimal synaptic communication is required for proper brain physiology, and slight perturbations of synapse function can lead to brain disorders. In fact, increasing evidence has demonstrated the relevance of synapse dysfunction as a major determinant of many neurological diseases. This notion has led to the concept of synaptopathies as brain diseases with synapse defects as shared pathogenic features. In this review, which was initiated at the 13th International Society for Neurochemistry Advanced School, we discuss basic concepts of synapse structure and function, and provide a critical view of how aberrant synapse physiology may contribute to neurodevelopmental disorders (autism, Down syndrome, startle disease, and epilepsy) as well as neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimer and Parkinson disease). We finally discuss the appropriateness and potential implications of gathering synapse diseases under a single term. Understanding common causes and intrinsic differences in disease-associated synaptic dysfunction could offer novel clues toward synapse-based therapeutic intervention for neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. In this Review, which was initiated at the 13th International Society for Neurochemistry (ISN) Advanced School, we discuss basic concepts of synapse structure and function, and provide a critical view of how aberrant synapse physiology may contribute to neurodevelopmental (autism, Down syndrome, startle disease, and epilepsy) as well as neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases), gathered together under the term of synaptopathies. Read the Editorial Highlight for this article on page . KW - Amyloid-beta oligomers; KW - Central nervous system KW - P75 Neurotrophin receptor KW - Cellular prion protein KW - Temporal-lobe epilepsy KW - Familial Alzheimers-disease KW - Inhibitory glycine receptor KW - Autism spectrum disorders KW - Alpha-synuclein oligomers KW - Dentate granule cells KW - Alzheimer disease KW - autism KW - Down syndrome KW - epilepsy KW - hyperekplexia KW - synapses Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-187509 VL - 138 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schrewe, L. A1 - Lill, C. M. A1 - Liu, T. A1 - Salmen, A. A1 - Gerdes, L. A. A1 - Guillot-Noel, L. A1 - Akkad, D. A. A1 - Blaschke, P. A1 - Graetz, C. A1 - Hoffjan, S. A1 - Kroner, A. A1 - Demir, S. A1 - Böhme, A. A1 - Rieckmann, P. A1 - El Ali, A. A1 - Hagemann, N. A1 - Hermann, D. M. A1 - Cournu-Rebeix, I. A1 - Zipp, F. A1 - Kümpfel, T. A1 - Buttmann, M. A1 - Zettl, U. K. A1 - Fontaine, B. A1 - Bertram, L. A1 - Gold, R. A1 - Chan, A. T1 - Investigation of sex-specific effects of apolipoprotein E on severity of EAE and MS JF - Journal of Neuroinflammation N2 - Background: Despite pleiotropic immunomodulatory effects of apolipoprotein E (apoE) in vitro, its effects on the clinical course of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and multiple sclerosis (MS) are still controversial. As sex hormones modify immunomodulatory apoE functions, they may explain contentious findings. This study aimed to investigate sex-specific effects of apoE on disease course of EAE and MS. Methods: MOG\(_{35-55}\) induced EAE in female and male apoE-deficient mice was assessed clinically and histopathologically. apoE expression was investigated by qPCR. The association of the MS severity score (MSSS) and APOE rs429358 and rs7412 was assessed across 3237 MS patients using linear regression analyses. Results: EAE disease course was slightly attenuated in male apoE-deficient (apoE\(^{-/-}\)) mice compared to wildtype mice (cumulative median score: apoE\(^{-/-}\) = 2 [IQR 0.0-4.5]; wildtype = 4 [IQR 1.0-5.0]; n = 10 each group, p = 0.0002). In contrast, EAE was more severe in female apoE\(^{-/-}\) mice compared to wildtype mice (cumulative median score: apoE\(^{-/-}\) = 3 [IQR 2.0-4.5]; wildtype = 3 [IQR 0.0-4.0]; n = 10, p = 0.003). In wildtype animals, apoE expression during the chronic EAE phase was increased in both females and males (in comparison to naive animals; p < 0.001). However, in MS, we did not observe a significant association between MSSS and rs429358 or rs7412, neither in the overall analyses nor upon stratification for sex. Conclusions: apoE exerts moderate sex-specific effects on EAE severity. However, the results in the apoE knock-out model are not comparable to effects of polymorphic variants in the human APOE gene, thus pinpointing the challenge of translating findings from the EAE model to the human disease. KW - immune KW - apoE KW - gender KW - inflammation KW - association studies in genetics KW - apoe KW - CNS disease KW - system KW - multiple sclerosis KW - MSSS KW - experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis KW - disease severity KW - cognitive function KW - Alzheimer disease Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-136252 VL - 12 IS - 234 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Riederer, Peter A1 - Laux, Gerd T1 - MAO-inhibitors in Parkinson's Disease JF - Experimental Neurobiology N2 - Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO-I) belong to the earliest drugs tried in Parkinson's disease (PD). They have been used with or without levodopa (L-DOPA). Non-selective MAO-I due to their side-effect/adverse reaction profile, like tranylcypromine have limited use in the treatment of depression in PD, while selective, reversible MAO-A inhibitors are recommended due to their easier clinical handling. For the treatment of akinesia and motor fluctuations selective irreversible MAO-B inhibitors selegiline and rasagiline are recommended. They are safe and well tolerated at the recommended daily doses. Their main differences are related to (1) metabolism, (2) interaction with CYP-enzymes and (3) quantitative properties at the molecular biological/genetic level. Rasagiline is more potent in clinical practise and has a hypothesis driven more favourable side effect/adverse reaction profile due to its metabolism to aminoindan. Both selegiline and rasagiline have a neuroprotective and neurorestaurative potential. A head-to head clinical trial would be of utmost interest from both the clinical outcome and a hypothesis-driven point of view. Selegiline is available as tablet and melting tablet for PD and as transdermal selegiline for depression, while rasagiline is marketed as tablet for PD. In general, the clinical use of MAO-I nowadays is underestimated. There should be more efforts to evaluate their clinical potency as antidepressants and antidementive drugs in addition to the final proof of their disease-modifying potential. In line with this are recent innovative developments of MAO-I plus inhibition of acetylcholine esterase for Alzheimer's disease as well as combined MAO-I and iron chelation for PD. KW - selegiline KW - rasagiline KW - moclobemide KW - phenelzine KW - tranylcypromine KW - acetylcholine KW - Alzheimer disease KW - antidepressive agents KW - depression KW - freezing KW - head KW - indans KW - iron KW - levodopa KW - monoamine oxidase KW - monoamine oxidase inhibitors KW - Parkinson disease Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140930 VL - 20 IS - 1 ER -