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Multifaceted Genes in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis-Frontotemporal Dementia

Ramya Ranganathan, Shaila Haque, Kayesha Coley, Stephanie Shepheard, Johnathan Cooper‐Knock, Janine Kirby

2020Frontiers in Neuroscience59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia are two progressive, adult onset neurodegenerative diseases, caused by the cell death of motor neurons in the motor cortex and spinal cord and cortical neurons in the frontal and temporal lobes respectively. Whilst these have previously appeared to be quite distinct disorders, in terms of areas affected and clinical symptoms, identification of cognitive dysfunction as a component of ALS, with some patients presenting with both ALS and FTD, overlapping features of neuropathology and the ongoing discoveries that a significant proportion of the genes underlying the familial forms of the disease are the same, has led to ALS and FTD being described as a disease spectrum. Many of these genes encode proteins in common biological pathways including RNA processing, autophagy, ubiquitin proteasome system, unfolded protein response and intracellular trafficking. This article provides an overview of the ALS-FTD genes before summarising other known ALS and FTD causing genes where mutations have been found primarily in patients of one disease and rarely in the other. In discussing these genes, the review highlights the similarity of biological pathways in which the encoded proteins function and the interactions that occur between these proteins, whilst recognising the distinctions of MAPT-related FTD and SOD1-related ALS. However, mutations in all of these genes result in similar pathology including protein aggregation and neuroinflammation, highlighting that multiple different mechanisms lead to common downstream effects and neuronal loss. Next generation sequencing has had a significant impact on the identification of genes associated with both diseases, and has also highlighted the widening clinical phenotypes associated with variants in these ALS and FTD genes. It is hoped that the large sequencing initiatives currently underway in ALS and FTD will begin to uncover why different diseases are associated with mutations within a single gene, especially as a personalised medicine approach to therapy, based on a patient’s genetics, approaches the clinic.

Topics & Concepts

Frontotemporal dementiaAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisC9orf72NeuroscienceSOD1BiologyTARDBPGeneNeuropathologyNeuroinflammationDiseaseGeneticsDementiaMedicinePathologyAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ResearchCholinesterase and Neurodegenerative DiseasesNeurological diseases and metabolism
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