Authors
Alberto J Espay, Joaquin A Vizcarra, Luca Marsili, Anthony E Lang, David K Simon, Aristide Merola, Keith A Josephs, Alfonso Fasano, Francesca Morgante, Rodolfo Savica, J Timothy Greenamyre, Franca Cambi, Tritia R Yamasaki, Caroline M Tanner, Ziv Gan-Or, Irene Litvan, Ignacio F Mata, Cyrus P Zabetian, Patrik Brundin, Hubert H Fernandez, David G Standaert, Marcelo A Kauffman, Michael A Schwarzschild, S Pablo Sardi, Todd Sherer, George Perry, James B Leverenz
Publication date
2019/2/12
Source
Neurology
Volume
92
Issue
7
Pages
329-337
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Description
The gold standard for a definitive diagnosis of Parkinson disease (PD) is the pathologic finding of aggregated α-synuclein into Lewy bodies and for Alzheimer disease (AD) aggregated amyloid into plaques and hyperphosphorylated tau into tangles. Implicit in this clinicopathologic-based nosology is the assumption that pathologic protein aggregation at autopsy reflects pathogenesis at disease onset. While these aggregates may in exceptional cases be on a causal pathway in humans (e.g., aggregated α-synuclein in SNCA gene multiplication or aggregated β-amyloid in APP mutations), their near universality at postmortem in sporadic PD and AD suggests they may alternatively represent common outcomes from upstream mechanisms or compensatory responses to cellular stress in order to delay cell death. These 3 conceptual frameworks of protein aggregation (pathogenic, epiphenomenon, protective) are difficult …
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