Litcius/Paper detail

Phosphodiesterase 4B: Master Regulator of Brain Signaling

Amy J. Tibbo, George S. Baillie

2020Cells72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are the only superfamily of enzymes that have the ability to break down cyclic nucleotides and, as such, they have a pivotal role in neurological disease and brain development. PDEs have a modular structure that allows targeting of individual isoforms to discrete brain locations and it is often the location of a PDE that shapes its cellular function. Many of the eleven different families of PDEs have been associated with specific diseases. However, we evaluate the evidence, which suggests the activity from a sub-family of the PDE4 family, namely PDE4B, underpins a range of important functions in the brain that positions the PDE4B enzymes as a therapeutic target for a diverse collection of indications, such as, schizophrenia, neuroinflammation, and cognitive function.

Topics & Concepts

PhosphodiesteraseRegulatorNeuroinflammationNeuroscienceSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Function (biology)Gene isoformCyclic nucleotide phosphodiesteraseBiologyComputational biologyDiseaseBioinformaticsEnzymeCell biologyMedicineGeneticsGenePsychiatryBiochemistryInternal medicinePhosphodiesterase function and regulationCholinesterase and Neurodegenerative DiseasesRenin-Angiotensin System Studies
Phosphodiesterase 4B: Master Regulator of Brain Signaling | Litcius