|
July
7, 2004
Mitochondria In Spinal Cords Is ALS Target
According To UCSD Medical Researchers
By Sue Pondrom
The selective
killing of spinal cord neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, occurs when
tiny cellular components called mitochondria actively recruit
a mutant disease-causing protein into specific neuron cells,
according to new research by University of California, San Diego
(UCSD) School of Medicine investigators.
Published in the July
8, 2004 issue of the journal Neuron, the findings identify
mitochondria as the focus of ALS toxicity and provide the first
explanation of how a mutant protein called SOD1 that occurs
in all cells in the body is damaging only to specific neuron
cells. The result is ALS, a progressive degeneration of motor
nerve cells in the spinal cord that leads to wasted muscles
and premature death in middle-aged adults.
Found in all cells,
mitochondria provide cellular energy in their role as the body’s
power generators. In addition, mitochondria are intricately
involved in a process called apoptosis, or programmed cell death,
which is the body’s normal method of disposing of damaged,
unwanted or unneeded cells.
“We believe that
when the mutant SOD1 binds to mitochondria, it affects the ability
of these components to generate cell energy,” said the
study’s senior author, Don Cleveland, Ph.D., a UCSD professor
of medicine, neurosciences, and cellular and molecular medicine,
and a faculty member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research.
He added that “the
SOD1 may also tip the balance and induce mitochondria to send
a cell death signal to the motor neurons.”
In laboratory studies
with tissue from animals and humans, the UCSD team determined
that the mutant SOD1 ignores all other mitochondria in cells
and tissue outside of the spinal cord, and binds only to the
mitochondria in the large motor neurons that begin in the spinal
cord and extend down the arms and legs. They found SOD1 both
inside the mitochondria and coated on the mitochondria’s
outer components.
“However, we
don’t know yet which is the most damaging, the mutant
protein inside the mitochondria or coated on the outside,”
Cleveland said. “This is part of our continuing work as
we seek components to block the toxicity of SOD1 and find ways
to slow the damage that occurs in ALS.”
The research was supported
by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Spinal
Cord Foundation, and the Bjorklund Foundation for ALS Research.
The study’s first
author was Jlan Liu, Ph.D., the Ludwig Institute for Cancer
Research and the UCSD Departments of Neurosciences, Medicine
and Cellular and Molecular Medicine. Co-authors were Concepcion
Lillo, Ph.D. and David Williams, Ph.D., UCSD Department of Pharmacology;
P. Andreas Jonsson, Ph.D., Stefan Marklund, M.D., and Thomas
Brannstrom, M.D., Department of Medical Biosciences, Umea University
Hospital, Sweden; Christine Vande Velde, Ph.D. Chrostopher M.
Ward, B.S., and Timothy M. Miller, M.D., Ph.D., Ludwig Institute
for Cancer Research and UCSD Departments of Neurosciences, Medicine
and Cellular and Molecular Medicine; Jamuna R. Subramaniam,
Ph.D., Jeffrey D. Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D., and Philip Wong, Ph.D.,
Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine; Peter M. Anderson, M.D., Department of Neurology,
Umea University Hospital, Sweden; and Ole Gredal, M.D., Department
of Neurology, Bispebjerg Hospital, Denmark.
Media
Contact: Sue Pondrom
(619) 543-6163
|