April 27, 2024

gholamreza Abdi

Academic Rank: Assistant professor
Address: -
Degree: Ph.D in -
Phone: -
Faculty: Persian Gulf Research Institue

Research

Title Mechanistic Insights and Potential Therapeutic Approaches in PolyQ Diseases via Autophagy
Type Article
Keywords
autophagy; polyQ; neurons; neurodegenerative diseases; Huntington’s diseases
Journal BIOMEDICINES
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11010162
Researchers mukul jain (First researcher) , nil patl (Second researcher) , gholamreza Abdi (Third researcher) , Maryam Abbasi Tarighat (Fourth researcher) , Arifullah Mohammed (Fifth researcher) , Muhammad Rajaei Ahmad Mohd Zain (Not in first six researchers) , Khang Wen Goh (Not in first six researchers)

Abstract

Polyglutamine diseases are a group of congenital neurodegenerative diseases categorized with genomic abnormalities in the expansion of CAG triplet repeats in coding regions of specific disease-related genes. Protein aggregates are the toxic hallmark for polyQ diseases and initiate neuronal death. Autophagy is a catabolic process that aids in the removal of damaged organelles or toxic protein aggregates, a process required to maintain cellular homeostasis that has the potential to fight against neurodegenerative diseases, but this pathway gets affected under diseased conditions, as there is a direct impact on autophagy-related gene expression. The increase in the accumulation of autophagy vesicles reported in neurodegenerative diseases was due to an increase in autophagy or may have been due to a decrease in autophagy flux. These reports suggested that there is a contribution of autophagy in the pathology of diseases and regulation in the process of autophagy. It was demonstrated in various disease models of polyQ diseases that autophagy upregulation by using modulators can enhance the dissolution of toxic aggregates and delay disease progression. In this review, interaction of the autophagy pathway with polyQ diseases was analyzed, and a therapeutic approach with autophagy inducing drugs was established for disease pathogenesis.