8 research outputs found

    Neurodegenerative Diseases and Autophagy

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    Most neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by the accumulation of aggregated proteins within neurons. These aggregate-prone proteins cause toxicity, a phenomenon that is further exacerbated when there is defective protein clearance. Autophagy is an intracellular clearance pathway that can clear these protein aggregates and has been shown to be beneficial in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases in a variety of model systems. Here, we introduce the key components of the autophagy machinery and signaling pathways that control this process and discuss the evidence that autophagic flux may be impaired and therefore a contributing factor in neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis. Finally, we review the use of autophagy upregulation as a therapeutic strategy to treat neurodegenerative disorders

    Species-specific variations and local landscape characteristics, but not temperature, predict avian species abundances in the Appalachian Mountains

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    Increasingly severe climate change has become a threat to global biodiversity in recent years. It is unclear, however, whether the threat to biodiversity posed by climate change is equal in magnitude to threats to biodiversity posed by factors such as land-use change and deforestation. The North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) contains annual species abundance counts on over four hundred species dating back to 1966, and therefore allows for the investigation of the effects of warming temperatures in recent decades on species abundances. I combined BBS counts on fifteen bird species along sixteen survey routes across the Appalachian Mountains with natural history data from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, temperature data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, geospatial landscape data from The Nature Conservancy, and geospatial vegetation data from the National Park Service to investigate the interacting effects of climate change, natural history, local landscape characteristics, and local vegetation on avian populations. By building a variety of generalized linear models (GLMs) in RStudio and ranking them according to Akaike’s Information Criterion (AIC), I found that species-specific variations and local landscape characteristics, but not temperature, most accurately predicted species abundances across different bird species and locations in the Appalachian Mountains. My finding suggests that land-use change, not climate change, is the primary threat to avian biodiversity in the Appalachian Mountains

    Deleterious mutations in the essential mRNA metabolism factor, hGle1, in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    International audienceAmyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the selective death of motor neurons. Causative mutations in the global RNA-processing proteins TDP-43 and FUS among others, as well as their aggregation in ALS patients, have identified defects in RNA metabolism as an important feature in this disease. Lethal congenital contracture syndrome 1 and lethal arthrogryposis with anterior horn cell disease are autosomal recessive fetal motor neuron diseases that are caused by mutations in another global RNA-processing protein, hGle1. In this study, we carried out the first screening of GLE1 in ALS patients (173 familial and 760 sporadic) and identified 2 deleterious mutations (1 splice site and 1 nonsense mutation) and 1 missense mutation. Functional analysis of the deleterious mutants revealed them to be unable to rescue motor neuron pathology in zebrafish morphants lacking Gle1. Furthermore, in HeLa cells, both mutations caused a depletion of hGle1 at the nuclear pore where it carries out an essential role in nuclear export of mRNA. These results suggest a haploinsufficiency mechanism and point to a causative role for GLE1 mutations in ALS patients. This further supports the involvement of global defects in RNA metabolism in ALS
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