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neurodegeneration

Wednesday 16 July 2003

WKP

Definition: Neurodegeneration is the progressive loss of structure or function ( degeneration ) of neurons, including death of neurons.

Many neurodegenerative diseases – including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and Huntington’s – occur as a result of neurodegenerative processes.

Such diseases are incurable, resulting in progressive degeneration and/or death of neuron cells. As research progresses, many similarities appear that relate these diseases to one another on a sub-cellular level.

Neurodegeneration can be found in many different levels of neuronal circuitry ranging from molecular to systemic.

Neurodegenerative diseases

Neurodegenerative diseases typically involve deposits of inclusion bodies that contain abnormal aggregated proteins. Therefore, it has been suggested that protein aggregation is pathogenic.

However, several lines of evidence indicate that inclusion bodies are not the main cause of toxicity, and probably represent a cellular protective response. Aggregation is a complex multi-step process of protein conformational change and accretion.

The early species in this process might be most toxic, perhaps through the exposure of buried moieties such as main chain NH and CO groups that could serve as hydrogen bond donors or acceptors in abnormal interactions with other cellular proteins.

Features

 paraneoplastic neurological degenerations

References

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