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TUSKEGEE - By Jerry Leonard
1998, CIA Oilmen & Israelis plan to overthrow
Saddam for the oil.
Bush/Gore Oil/War-(Oct,2000)
Bush's own explainer (Oct
2000) re:
Iraq Oil
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NEJM
| Volume 348:1365-1375 |
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April 3, 2003 |
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Number 14 |
Apoptosis and Caspases
in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Robert M. Friedlander, M.D.
Acute and chronic neurodegenerative diseases are illnesses associated
with high morbidity and mortality, and few or no effective options
are available for their treatment. A characteristic of many
neurodegenerative diseases — which include stroke, brain trauma,
spinal cord injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Huntington's
disease, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease — is
neuronal-cell death.1 Given that central nervous
system tissue has very limited, if any, regenerative capacity,
it is of utmost importance to limit the damage caused by neuronal
death.2,3,4,5
During the past decade, considerable progress has been made in
understanding the process of cell death.6 In
this article, I review the causes and mechanisms of neuronal-cell
death, especially as it pertains to the caspase family of proteases
associated with cell death. I will review evidence linking specific
cell-death pathways to neurologic diseases and discuss how knowledge
of the mechanisms of cell death has led to novel therapeutic
strategies.
Types of Cell Death
Cell death occurs by necrosis or apoptosis.7,8,9
These two mechanisms have distinct histologic and biochemical
signatures. In necrosis, the stimulus of death (e.g., ischemia) is
itself often the direct cause of the demise of the cell. In
apoptosis, by contrast, the stimulus of death activates a cascade of
events that orchestrate the destruction of the cell. Unlike necrosis,
which is a pathologic process, apoptosis is part of normal
development (physiologic apoptosis); however, it also occurs in a
variety of diseases (aberrant apoptosis).
Necrosis
Necrotic cell death in the central nervous system follows acute
ischemia or traumatic injury to the brain or spinal cord.10,11
It occurs in areas that are most severely affected by abrupt
biochemical collapse, which leads to the generation of free radicals
and excitotoxins (e.g., glutamate, cytotoxic cytokines, and calcium).
The histologic features of necrotic cell death are mitochondrial and
nuclear swelling, dissolution of organelles, and condensation of
chromatin around the nucleus. These events are followed by the
rupture of nuclear and cytoplasmic membranes and the degradation of
DNA by random enzymatic cuts in the molecule.9,12
Given these mechanisms and the rapidity with which the process
occurs, necrotic cell death is extremely difficult to treat or
prevent.
Apoptosis
Apoptotic cell death, also known as programmed cell death, can be
a feature of both acute and chronic neurologic diseases.1,9,13
After acute insults, apoptosis occurs in areas that are not
severely affected by the injury. For example, after ischemia, there
is necrotic cell death in the core of the lesion, where hypoxia is
most severe, and apoptosis occurs in the penumbra, where collateral
blood flow reduces the degree of hypoxia (Figure 1).
10,14,15,16
Apoptotic death is also a component of the lesion that appears after
brain or spinal cord injury.11,17,18,19,20
In chronic neurodegenerative diseases, it is the predominant
form of cell death.21,22,23

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Figure 1. An Embolus in the
Bifurcation of the Middle Cerebral Artery.
The territory perfused by this artery and areas with little or no
collateral flow are subjected to extreme hypoxia and necrotic cell
death. In the penumbra, where there is some degree of collateral blood
flow, a gradient of tissue perfusion establishes a threshold among
necrotic cell death, apoptotic cell death, and tissue survival.
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In apoptosis, a biochemical cascade activates proteases that destroy
molecules that are required for cell survival and others that mediate
a program of cell suicide. During the process, the cytoplasm
condenses, mitochondria and ribosomes aggregate, the nucleus
condenses, and chromatin aggregates. After its death, the cell
fragments into "apoptotic bodies," and chromosomal DNA is
enzymatically cleaved to 180-bp internucleosomal fragments. Other
features of apoptosis are a reduction in the membrane potential of
the mitochondria, intracellular acidification, generation of free
radicals, and externalization of phosphatidylserine residues.6,7,12,24,25
Mechanisms of Programmed Cell
Death
The rational development of target-based strategies for the
treatment of diseases in which apoptosis is prominent requires an
understanding of the molecular mechanisms of programmed cell death.
As recently as 10 years ago, the mediators of this process were for
the most part unknown. Beginning in 1993, a series of seminal studies
of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans identified several
genes that control cell death.26 In this worm,
four genes are required for the orderly execution of the
developmental apoptotic program. The ced-3, ced-4, and
egl-1 genes mediate cell death, and worms that have lost the
function of these genes harbor extra cells.27,28
By contrast, ced-9–deficient worms have diffuse apoptotic cell
death, indicating that this gene functions as an inhibitor of
apoptosis. Metazoan homologues of ced-3 (caspases), ced-4 (Apaf-1),
ced-9 (Bcl-2), and egl-1 (BH3-only proteins) have been identified.27,29,30,31,32
Caspase Family
The major executioners in the apoptotic program are proteases
known as caspases (cysteine-dependent, aspartate-specific proteases).6,33
Caspases are cysteine proteases that are homologous to the nematode
ced-3 gene product. The interleukin-1 –converting
enzyme (also known as caspase 1), the founding member of the caspase
family in vertebrates, was identified by its homology to ced-3.27,29
Thus far, 14 members of the caspase family have been identified,
11 of which are present in humans.27
Caspases directly and indirectly orchestrate the morphologic changes
of the cell during apoptosis.
Caspases exist as latent precursors, which, when activated,
initiate the death program by destroying key components of the
cellular infrastructure and activating factors that mediate damage to
the cells. Procaspases are composed of p10 and p20 subunits and an
N-terminal recruitment domain. Active caspases are heterotetramers
consisting of two p10 and two p20 subunits derived from two
procaspase molecules (Figure 2). Caspases have been
categorized into upstream initiators and downstream executioners.
Upstream caspases are activated by the cell-death signal (e.g., tumor
necrosis factor [TNF- ])
and have a long N-terminal prodomain that regulates their activation.6,34
These upstream caspases activate downstream caspases, which directly
mediate the events leading to the demise of the cell. Downstream
caspases have a short N-terminal prodomain.

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Figure 2. Mechanisms of Caspase
Activation.
Upstream initiator caspases are activated during the initiation of
the cell-death cascade. They contain an activation or binding prodomain
(white), a large subunit (orange), and a small subunit (yellow).
Activated upstream caspases have autocatalytic activity and activate
downstream effector caspases, which have a short prodomain (blue), as
well as a large subunit (purple) and a short subunit (green). Downstream
caspases mediate many of the classic phenomena of apoptotic cell death.
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A critical aspect of caspase-mediated cell death lies in the events
regulating the activation of initiator caspases. Upstream caspases
may be subclassified into two groups, according to the molecules
modulating their activation. Procaspases 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 11, 12, and
13 have a long N-terminal prodomain called the caspase-recruiting
domain (CARD). Caspases 8 and 10 have a long N-terminal prodomain
called the death-effector domain (DED). A regulating molecule is
required for specific binding to the CARD/DED domain, which results
in caspase activation. These molecules are caspase-specific and
trigger-specific. For example, after the binding of TNF-
to its receptor, the TNF receptor binds to the DED molecule that
mediates caspase 8 activation. Of the caspases with a long prodomain,
caspases 2, 8, 9, and 10 are initiators of apoptosis and caspases 1,
4, 5, 11, 12, and 13 are involved in cytokine activation.34
There is mounting evidence that in addition to its role in
inflammation, caspase 1 is also an important upstream caspase.18,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45
Once upstream caspases are activated in an amplifying cascade,
they activate the executioner caspases downstream.6,34,46
Of these caspases with a short prodomain, caspases 3, 6, and 7
are effectors of apoptosis and caspase 14 is involved in cytokine
maturation. Executioner caspases mediate cell death by two main
mechanisms: destruction and activation. The systematic destruction of
key cellular substrates is crucial. The death process begins its
terminal phase when executioner caspases activate the machinery that
degrades DNA.25,47,48,49
Caspases are also regulated at the transcriptional level. Transcriptional
up-regulation of caspases occurs in chronic neurologic diseases
such as ALS and Huntington's disease, as well as in acute neurologic
diseases such as stroke,35,38,50,51
which indicates that the degree of activation and the number of
caspase molecules within the cell determine the level of caspase
activity.
Role of the Bcl-2 Family in Regulating Release of Mitochondrial
Cytochrome c
Cytochrome c is a member of the mitochondrial electron-transport
chain that is required for the generation of ATP. In addition
to its role in cellular energetics, cytochrome c is an important
trigger of the caspase cascade. Cytochrome c –mediated
activation of cell-death pathways occurs if cytochrome c is
released from the mitochondria into the cytoplasm. In the cytoplasm,
cytochrome c binds to Apaf-1 to form the apoptosome — a
molecular complex consisting of cytochrome c, Apaf-1, ATP, and
procaspase 9. The apoptosome activates caspase 9,30,52
an upstream initiator of apoptosis. This mechanism makes regulation
of the release of cytochrome c a key step in the initiation
of apoptosis (Figure 3).6,53

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Figure 3. Key Mediators of the
Caspase Pathway in the Mitochondria.
Three main signals cause the release of apoptogenic mitochondrial
mediators: proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, elevated levels of
intracellular calcium, and reactive oxygen species. Four mitochondrial
molecules mediating downstream cell-death pathways have been identified:
cytochrome c, Smac/Diablo, apoptosis-inducing factor, and
endonuclease G. Cy tochrome c binds to Apaf-1, which, together
with procaspase 9, forms the "apoptosome," which activates caspase 9. In
turn, caspase 9 activates caspase 3. Smac/Diablo binds to inhibitors of
activated caspases and causes further caspase activation.
Apoptosis-inducing factor and endonuclease G mediate caspase-independent
cell-death pathways.
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Members of the Bcl-2 family are proapoptotic or antiapoptotic. The
balance between proapoptotic and antiapoptotic signals from the Bcl-2
family has a crucial role in the release of cytochrome c.6,54,55
Moreover, members of the caspase family can influence the balance of
proapoptotic and antiapoptotic signals from the Bcl-2 family. For
example, caspase 8 and caspase 1 cleave Bid, a member of the Bcl-2
family, generating a truncated fragment with proapoptotic activity.56
In addition to cytochrome c, other modulators of cell death
within mitochondria are released during the apoptotic process.53
Inhibitors of Apoptosis
To control aberrant caspase activation, which can kill the cell,
additional molecules inhibit caspase-mediated pathways. Among these
are proteins known as inhibitors of apoptosis. These inhibitors
interact directly with modulators of cell death. For example, the
X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis and the neuronal inhibitor of
apoptosis are proteins in neurons that directly inhibit caspase 3
activity and protect neurons from ischemic injury.34,55,57
Caspases in Neurologic
Diseases
Caspases have a pivotal role in the progression of a variety of
neurologic disorders. Despite the various causes of such disorders,
the mechanism of cell death is similar in a broad spectrum of
neurologic diseases.1,37,58
However, the trigger of aberrant caspase activation in most of these
diseases is not well understood. In acute neurologic diseases, both
necrosis and caspase-mediated apoptotic cell death occur.11,17,36,59,60
By contrast, in chronic neurodegenerative diseases, caspase-mediated
apoptotic pathways have the dominant role in mediating cell
dysfunction and cell death.38,39,61,62
A primary difference between acute and chronic neurologic diseases is
the magnitude of the stimulus causing cell death. The greater
stimulus in acute diseases results in both necrotic and apoptotic
cell death, whereas the milder insults in chronic diseases initiate
apoptotic cell death.
Acute Neurologic Diseases
Ischemic stroke was the first neurologic disease in which the
activation of a caspase (caspase 1) was documented.44
Moreover, inhibition of caspases reduces tissue damage and allows
remarkable neurologic improvement.44,63,64
Activation of caspases 1, 3, 8, 9, and 11 and release of cytochrome
c have been demonstrated in cerebral ischemia,41,65,66,67
and the Bcl-2 family has also been incriminated.68,69
Mice that express a dominant-negative caspase 1 construct or that are
deficient in caspase 1 or caspase 11 have significant protection from
ischemic injury.44,65,70
Pharmacologic pretreatment of mice with a broad caspase inhibitor
or with semiselective inhibitors of caspase 1 and caspase 3 or
delayed treatment with a caspase 3 inhibitor protect the brain from
ischemic injury.64,71
There is a pattern of combined necrotic and apoptotic cell death
after ischemic or traumatic injury.15,18,19,20,36,59
In ischemia, necrotic cell death occurs in the core of the
infarction, where hypoxia is most severe, and leads to abrupt
cessation of energy supply and acute cellular collapse. Conversely,
in the ischemic penumbra, the degree of energy deprivation is not as
severe, because collateral vessels supply the region with oxygenated
blood. In this case, the cell must reach a critical threshold
of injury to activate the caspase cascade. Before this threshold is
reached, however, a compromise in neuronal energetics can cause cell
dysfunction before cell death. What determines the threshold in a
particular cell is unknown. Nevertheless, the existence of the
threshold offers an opportunity to rescue cells in the penumbra by
reversing the initial neurologic deficit caused by cell dysfunction.
Factors that promote survival can raise the threshold, as evidenced
in the experiments with caspase inhibition described above and in
studies in which the balance among members of the Bcl-2 family was
transgenically manipulated.68,69
The cerebral tissue protected by modulation of caspase activation
is invariably the penumbra.44,64,66,68
Chronic Neurodegenerative Diseases
Cell death in chronic neurodegenerative diseases often occurs as a
result of a mutation in one or several genes. This genetic alteration
changes the function of the gene product in a way that has a
detrimental effect on the cell. Environmental factors have also been
incriminated in chronic neurodegeneration, but the cause of many such
disorders remains unknown. I will describe the key role of the
caspase family in two diseases, ALS and Huntington's disease. There
is evidence suggesting that caspases have a role in Alzheimer's
disease, Parkinson's disease, and dementia associated with human
immunodeficiency virus infection.62,72,73
The cause of the selective death of motor neurons in ALS or of
medium-sized spiny neurons in the striatum in Huntington's disease
is, for the most part, not understood. This question is the focus of
intense investigation.
ALS
ALS is characterized by the progressive and specific loss of motor
neurons in the brain, brain stem, and spinal cord.74
The average age at onset is 55 years, and the average life expectancy
after the clinical onset is 4 years. The only recognized treatment
for ALS is riluzole, whose use extends survival by only about
three months. Familial and sporadic forms of the disease have been
described. The natural history and histologic abnormalities in these
two forms of ALS are not distinguishable.
A mutation in the gene encoding superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1)
has been identified in 10 percent of patients with familial
ALS.75 In transgenic mice expressing the human
mutant SOD1 gene, a syndrome develops with many features of ALS,
including specific cell death of motor neurons, progressive weakness,
and early death.76 These mouse models
of ALS and other mice with additional ALS-linked mutations in SOD1
are effective tools for the study of molecular mechanisms and
pharmacotherapy for ALS.38,67,77
The first evidence of a role of a caspase in a neurodegenerative
disease came from experiments in which the "ALS mouse" was cross-bred
with a mouse expressing a mutant caspase 1 gene that inhibited
caspase 1 in neurons.61 As compared with mice
expressing only the mutant SOD1 transgene, mice expressing both the
mutant SOD1 transgene and the mutant caspase 1 transgene had a
duration of survival that was greater by 9 percent, and disease
progression was slowed by more than 50 percent. Furthermore,
intraventricular administration of a broad caspase inhibitor (zVAD-fmk)
was neuroprotective and extended survival in the ALS mice by 22
percent.38
A prolonged period of neuronal caspase activation (especially of
caspase 1) was detected in transgenic ALS mice (Figure 4A).38,42,43
As these mice aged, there was progressive transcriptional up-regulation
of caspase 1 messenger RNA (mRNA), followed by up-regulation of
caspase 3 mRNA (Figure 4B). Despite treatment of ALS mice
with the enzymatic caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk, transcriptional
up-regulation of caspase 1 and caspase 3 was delayed, suggesting that
there is a non–cell-autonomous "contagious" apoptotic process in
these mice (see below).38 These sequential events
are also detected at the level of enzymatic activity.38,40,43
The finding of caspase 1 and caspase 3 activation in spinal
cord samples from patients with ALS indicates the clinical relevance
of these animal models of ALS.38,78

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Figure 4. Neurologic Lesions in
Mice with ALS.
Panel A shows activation of neuronal caspase 1 in an axial section of
the spinal cord of a 90-day-old mouse with ALS (immunostained with a
caspase 1 antibody). At this age, the mouse is at the beginning or the
middle of the symptomatic stage. There is no caspase 1 activation in the
dorsal horn or in the white matter. In the presymptomatic stage (Panel
B), the earliest cell-death signal detected is the activation of
neuronal caspase 1. At this stage, there are no overt signs of cell
death or strong tissue reaction. In the early symptomatic stage (Panel
C), there is widespread activation of caspase 1 and caspase 3, release
of cytochrome c, and proapoptotic changes in Bcl-2 family
members. Ventral motor neurons and axons die, and reactive microgliosis
and astrocytosis are present. As the disease advances, the findings
described above become more overt (Panel D) and are accompanied by
progressive muscle atrophy.
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Caspase 9 activation, cytochrome c release, and proapoptotic
changes in the Bcl-2 family have also been detected in spinal cords
of ALS mice.67,79
Moreover, ALS mice bearing a transgenic Bcl-2 gene
survive longer than other ALS mice.80
Huntington's Disease
Huntington's disease is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative
disorder in which specific cell death occurs in the neostriatum and
cortex.13,81
Onset usually occurs during the fourth or fifth decade of life, with
a mean survival after onset of 15 to 20 years. Huntington's disease
is universally fatal, and there is no effective treatment. Symptoms
include a characteristic movement disorder (Huntington's chorea),
cognitive dysfunction, and psychiatric symptoms. The disease is
caused by a mutation encoding an abnormal expansion of CAG-encoded
polyglutamine repeats in a protein called huntingtin.82
The discovery of the mutant gene responsible for the disease made
it possible to create transgenic mouse models of it.83
In these mice, apoptotic pathways and newly described cell-death
pathways that are neither apoptotic nor necrotic have been demonstrated.84,85
One of the earliest events in the presymptomatic and early symptomatic
stages of the disease is transcriptional up-regulation of the
caspase 1 gene.39 This event appears to result
from nuclear translocation of N-terminal fragments of mutant
huntingtin.86 As the disease
progresses, the caspase 3 gene is transcriptionally up-regulated, and
the protein is activated.35 Activation of
caspase 8 and caspase 9 and release of cytochrome c have also
been demonstrated in Huntington's disease.87,88
Evidence is beginning to accumulate of both a toxic effect of
huntingtin fragments and depletion of huntingtin in Huntington's
disease.35,39,89,90,91
Huntingtin is a substrate for caspase 1 and caspase 3.92,93
As the disease progresses, increased caspase-mediated cleavage of
huntingtin increases the generation of huntingtin fragments and
depletes wild-type huntingtin (Figure 5).39
It appears that some features of Huntington's disease result from
the depletion of this protein.94

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Figure 5. Huntington's Disease.
Neurons of patients with Huntington's disease contain one copy of the
wild-type huntingtin allele (producing orange protein) and one copy of
the mutant allele (producing orange and blue protein). Possibly as part
of the normal proteolysis of huntingtin, an N-terminal fragment is
generated. Mutant N-terminal fragments accumulate and aggregate, forming
neuronal intranuclear inclusions. Nuclear translocation of mutant
N-terminal fragments up-regulates transcription of caspase 1. As the
disease progresses, caspase 1 activates caspase 3. Caspase 1 and caspase
3 cleave huntingtin, producing N-terminal fragments and resulting in the
depletion of huntingtin. As the disease progresses further, Bid is
activated, releasing cytochrome c. Assembly of the apoptosome
activates caspase 9 and caspase 3. Progressive caspase activation leads
to neuronal dysfunction and cell death.
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Neuronal dysfunction caused by the down-regulation of receptors that
bind important neurotransmitters is another important feature of
Huntington's disease.95 We know that this
down-regulation of receptors is, at least in part, a caspase-mediated
event, since the inhibition of caspase also inhibits receptor
down-regulation.39 This evidence
suggests that caspases are mediators not only of cell death but also
of cell dysfunction.
Several of the findings in mouse models of Huntington's disease
have also been demonstrated in human striatal brain tissue, including
activation of caspases 1, 3, 8, and 9 and release of cytochrome c.39,87,88
Transgenic mice have been used as a tool for evaluating and
demonstrating the efficacy of caspase inhibitors, creatine, and
minocycline in an animal model of Huntington's disease.35,39,85
Minocycline
Minocycline is a second-generation tetracycline with remarkable
neuroprotective properties. Because it inhibits the production of
nitric oxide by the inducible form of nitric oxide synthetase,
minocycline was evaluated in experimental models of cerebral ischemia.
Minocycline significantly reduced the severity of ischemia-induced
tissue injury and neurologic dysfunction.50,51
Along with the neuroprotection it provided, minocycline inhibited
the ischemia-induced up-regulation of nitric oxide synthase,
caspase 1, and reactive microgliosis.96
Neuroprotection by minocycline has also been observed in mouse models
of Huntington's disease, ALS, brain injury, Parkinson's disease, and
multiple sclerosis.35,67,97
The primary mechanism of action of minocycline is the direct
inhibition of the release of cytochrome c; secondarily, it inhibits
downstream events related to cell death — in particular, the
activation of caspase 3.67 It is not clear whether
minocycline inhibits reactive microgliosis or the production of
nitric oxide synthase directly or by a secondary process that follows
the inhibition of cytochrome c release. Minocycline is orally
bioavailable, crosses the blood–brain barrier, and has a proven
safety record in humans. It is being evaluated in clinical trials in
patients with Huntington's disease and ALS.
Contagious Apoptosis ("The
Kindergarten Effect")
The process of cell death in one cell can affect the dynamics of
cell death in neighboring cells.38 Factors
generated by cells as they die and after they die are detrimental to
neighboring cells. Neighboring cells are exposed to triggering
factors that are similar to those that affect a cell that is dying.
For example, during a stroke, a neuron exposed to an ischemic
environment triggers the cell-death cascade and produces
interleukin-1 , TNF- ,
and free radicals that play a part in the cell's own demise.1
These diffusible factors affect neighboring neurons that have
been similarly exposed to ischemia. Since there is a gradient of
ischemia, neurons that might not have died as the result of the
ischemic insult alone die from a combination of exposure to a
sublethal ischemic environment and the diffusible toxic factors
generated by their dying neighbors.
This phenomenon also occurs in chronic neurodegenerative diseases.
For example, in ALS mediated by mutant SOD1, the mutant SOD1
protein initiates the cell-death cascade in one particular motor
neuron. As the neuron progresses through the cascade and eventually
dies, it releases proapoptotic factors that affect neighboring cells.38
Since these cells have the same genetic predisposition as their dying
neighbor, such factors might induce them, too, to initiate the
cell-death cascade (Figure 6). From a therapeutic
standpoint, this concept is important, because an inhibitor of
apoptosis not only will slow the process of cell death in one
particular cell, but is also likely to inhibit the production of the
diffusible toxic factors that might initiate the cell-death cascade
in a neighboring cell.
Chronic Caspase Activation and
Cell Dysfunction
Apoptotic cell death in the ischemic penumbra results from massive
cytotoxic activation of cell-death pathways, whereas in chronic
neurodegenerative diseases, weaker stimuli of cell death cause
sublethal activation of caspase. Chronic, sublethal activation of
caspase appears to mediate cell dysfunction, which precedes cell
death.38,40
Cell dysfunction of substantial magnitude, occurring before cell
death, might result in symptomatic disease. Given that caspases may
be active in individual neurons for a long period (potentially weeks
to months), inhibition of caspase in these circumstances could reduce
cell dysfunction and delay cell death.39
In acute diseases, a delayed wave of cell death can be detected up to
one month after the initial injury.19,98
Given the chronic nature of caspase activation, caspase inhibition
is a plausible approach to the treatment of neurologic diseases.
Conclusions
During the past several years, our understanding of the mechanisms
mediating cell death in neurologic diseases has improved considerably.
The fact that activation of these pathways is a feature of a
broad range of neurologic diseases makes them important and
attractive therapeutic targets. Pharmaceutical companies are actively
searching for compounds that inhibit these pathways. The first
clinical trials of an inhibitor of apoptosis (minocycline) for
neurodegenerative disorders (Huntington's disease and ALS) are in
progress.35,38
It is likely that in the next several years, additional inhibitors of
apoptosis will become part of the everyday armamentarium of
clinicians who are treating neurologic diseases that involve caspase-mediated
cell dysfunction and cell death.
Source Information
From the Neuroapoptosis Laboratory, Division of
Cerebrovascular Surgery, Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's
Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Friedlander at the Department
of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St., Boston, MA 02115,
or at
rfriedlander@rics.bwh.harvard.edu.
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