doctoralThesis
Contribuição das vias de reparo por excisão de bases e nucleotídeos no desenvolvimento de fenótipos neurodegenerativos nos modelos transgênicos de Caenorhabditis elegans
Fecha
2021-01-19Registro en:
CADAVID, César Orlando Muñoz. Contribuição das vias de reparo por excisão de bases e nucleotídeos no desenvolvimento de fenótipos neurodegenerativos nos modelos transgênicos de Caenorhabditis elegans. 2021. 139f. Tese (Doutorado em Biotecnologia) - Centro de Tecnologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2021.
Autor
Cadavid, César Orlando Muñoz
Resumen
Neurodegenerative diseases (NDs) are characterized by a progressive neuronal
loss leading to motor or cognitive impairment. Although it is still not completely
understood, NDs share many molecular mechanisms such as: oxidative stress,
protein aggregation, deficiency of the ubiquitin–proteasome–autophagy system,
mitochondrial dysfunction, impaired bioenergetics, dysfunction of neurotrophins
and neuroinflammatory processes. The clinical observations that deficiencies in
the nucleotide excision repair (NER) and base excision repair (BER) pathways
cause human pathologies associated with neurological symptoms suggest that
NER and BER might also play a critical role in chronic NDs. Here, we evaluated
the deficiency of BER and NER pathways, especially EXO-3 and XPA-1,
respectively, on the development of neurodegenerative phenotypes in
Caenorhabditis elegans. EXO-3 and XPA-1 inhibition affected redox status by
increasing ROS levels and up-regulating the expression of stress resistance
related genes in a SKN-1 dependent manner. Similar results were found when
APN1, XPC1 and CSB1 proteins were evaluated. EXO-3 and XPA-1 deficiency
also activated the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial unfolded protein
response (UPR) and interfered in proteostasis as indicated by the reduced
proteasome activity and proteasome subunits expression. Thesee alterations
were associated with neurodegeneration of pan- and cholinergic-marked neurons.
The neurodegeneration induced by EXO-3 and XPA-1 deficiency appears to be
triggered by hyperactivation of the DNA damage sensor PARP-1 since this
phenotype is rescued by PARP-1 inhibition. Inhibition of the apn-1, xpc-1 and csb1 genes in transgenic animals for Mal de Alzheimer and Hungtinton's disease accelerated neurodegenerative phenotypes, the most marked affect were in animals treted with csb-1(RNAi). Together, these results support a model where
deficiency of NER and BER pathways plays an active role generating a network of
stress signals sufficiently strong to trigger neurodegeneration.