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Download - Advances in Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation

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R E V I E W A RT I C L EFaulty brakes:An <strong>in</strong>hibitory neuronal deficit <strong>in</strong> thepathogenesis of motor neuron diseaseMart<strong>in</strong> R Turner,MA, MBBS, PhD, FRCP,is a Medical Research CouncilCl<strong>in</strong>ician Scientist & MotorNeurone Disease Association LadyEdith Wolfson Fellow with<strong>in</strong> theOxford University NuffieldDepartment of Cl<strong>in</strong>ical<strong>Neuroscience</strong>s. He established theOxford Study for Biomarkers <strong>in</strong>MND (‘BioMOx’), a large cohort ofpatients who have undergone serialadvanced MRI, eye-track<strong>in</strong>g, serum<strong>and</strong> CSF sampl<strong>in</strong>g.Gwenaëlle Douaud,PhD,is a senior post-doctoral scientist atthe Oxford University FMRIBCentre. She works on the<strong>in</strong>tegration of advanced MRImodalities to explore thepathogenesis of Hunt<strong>in</strong>gton’s <strong>and</strong>Alzheimer’s disease <strong>in</strong> addition toMND. Her most recent focus is onmovement disorders <strong>and</strong> the roleof circuit changes <strong>in</strong> the basalganglia.Correspondence to:Dr Mart<strong>in</strong> Turner,Cl<strong>in</strong>ical Neurology,West W<strong>in</strong>g Level 3,John Radcliffe Hospital,Oxford OX3 9DU, UK.Email: mart<strong>in</strong>.turner@ndcn.ox.ac.ukIntroductionMotor neuron disease, <strong>in</strong> its commonest cl<strong>in</strong>ical formamyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), is characterisedby the degeneration of upper motor neurons (UMNs)of the corticosp<strong>in</strong>al tract (CST) <strong>and</strong> lower motorneurons (LMNs) of the bra<strong>in</strong>stem nuclei <strong>and</strong> sp<strong>in</strong>alcord anterior horns. 1 It is recognised to have cl<strong>in</strong>ical,pathological <strong>and</strong>, <strong>in</strong> cases with an <strong>in</strong>tronic hexanucleotiderepeat expansion <strong>in</strong> C9ORF72, geneticoverlap with frontotemporal dementia (FTD). 2 Halfof MND patients die with<strong>in</strong> three years of symptomonset, typically via respiratory failure. There is nospecific test for MND, <strong>and</strong> diagnosis is based on cl<strong>in</strong>icalfeatures, with an average delay from symptomonset to diagnosis of one year.To ask “what is the cause of MND?” is to underestimatethe emerg<strong>in</strong>g pathogenic complexity. Only5% of cases report a family history. Cytoplasmic<strong>in</strong>clusions of the ubiquit<strong>in</strong>ated 43 kDa transactiveregionDNA-b<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g prote<strong>in</strong>, TDP-43, superficiallyappear to be the unify<strong>in</strong>g hallmark for the 95% whohave apparently sporadic MND. However, TDP-43<strong>in</strong>clusions are notably absent <strong>in</strong> the 20% of familialcases associated with mutations of SOD1, despitebe<strong>in</strong>g cl<strong>in</strong>ically <strong>in</strong>dist<strong>in</strong>guishable from other MNDpatients. Thus, there appear to be multiple discrete‘tributaries’ flow<strong>in</strong>g towards a common ‘waterfall’,beyond which there is a typically rapid, relativelyselective motor neuronal degeneration. In the vastmajority of apparently sporadic cases, MND is likelyto <strong>in</strong>volve multiple genetic <strong>in</strong>fluences operat<strong>in</strong>g ata low level <strong>in</strong>dividually, comb<strong>in</strong>ed with as yetpoorly-def<strong>in</strong>ed environmental factors.The bra<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> MNDCase reports of MND with bra<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>volvementbeyond the motor cortex can be found <strong>in</strong> the early20th Century literature, now recognised as MNDassociated with FTD, largely of the behaviouralvariant. Later post mortem studies confirmed widespreadcerebral <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> MND even withoutfrank dementia. 3 A spectrum of cognitive dysfunction,predom<strong>in</strong>antly of a dysexecutive nature, <strong>and</strong>detectable <strong>in</strong> at least a third of MND cases withoutfrank FTD, emerged over the follow<strong>in</strong>g decades,cemented by the f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g of the common TDP-43histological signature. 4Aberrant axonal transport is one of several majorthemes <strong>in</strong> MND pathogenesis, 5 <strong>in</strong> which a LMN‘dy<strong>in</strong>g back’ is then presumed to account for theconsistent <strong>in</strong>volvement of the CST, noted even <strong>in</strong>apparently cl<strong>in</strong>ically LMN-only cases. However, theearly occurrence of cognitive impairment <strong>in</strong> somecases of ALS, <strong>and</strong> a rare UMN-only variant of MND(primary lateral sclerosis) often associated withsevere atrophy of the motor cortex <strong>and</strong> strik<strong>in</strong>glyabsent LMN pathology, support a top-down ‘dy<strong>in</strong>gforward’ process. Comb<strong>in</strong>ed cl<strong>in</strong>ical <strong>and</strong> postmortem analysis supports a ma<strong>in</strong> focus ofpathology at the site of symptom onset, withcontiguous spread through UMN <strong>and</strong> LMN populations.6 A clear primacy of one over other rema<strong>in</strong>suncerta<strong>in</strong>, with the <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g sense that thedisease must be understood as a whole ‘system’degeneration that <strong>in</strong>cludes the bra<strong>in</strong> at some level<strong>in</strong> all cases.Excitotoxicity <strong>and</strong> cortical hyperexcitability<strong>in</strong> MNDRaised levels of CSF glutamate, <strong>and</strong> abnormalitiesof glutamate transport <strong>and</strong> reuptake <strong>in</strong> human postmortem tissue as well as animal models of MND,underp<strong>in</strong> an excitotoxic theme of pathogenesis, <strong>in</strong>which over-stimulation of motor neurons results <strong>in</strong>eventual calcium-mediated cell death. 5 An alternativeor contributory mechanism might be a reduction<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>hibitory neuronal <strong>in</strong>fluences. Cortical <strong>and</strong>sp<strong>in</strong>al cord <strong>in</strong>terneuronal local circuits are found<strong>in</strong>timately associated with both the UMN <strong>and</strong> LMNpopulations respectively, <strong>and</strong> a diverse range ofevidence supports a role for their <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong>pathogenesis. 7 Paired transcranial magnetic stimulationcan be used to explore cortical <strong>in</strong>hibitorycircuits, <strong>and</strong> studies <strong>in</strong> MND demonstrated a reduction<strong>in</strong> the normal <strong>in</strong>hibitory response seen at short<strong>in</strong>terstimulus <strong>in</strong>tervals. 8 An adapted thresholdtrack<strong>in</strong>gmethod to assess this reduction <strong>in</strong> short<strong>in</strong>terval<strong>in</strong>tracortical <strong>in</strong>hibition has demonstratedspecificity for MND over mimic disorders. 9Furthermore, this methodology provided pivotalevidence for an <strong>in</strong>crease <strong>in</strong> cortical hyperexcitabilityprior to the development of symptoms <strong>in</strong>carriers of SOD1 mutations. 10Neuroimag<strong>in</strong>g evidence for an‘<strong>in</strong>terneuronopathy’ <strong>in</strong> MNDPioneer<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> vivo cortical studies <strong>in</strong> MNDemployed activation positron emission tomography(PET), observ<strong>in</strong>g an extended area of cortical activation<strong>in</strong> response to a motor task. It was suggestedthis “boundary shift” might reflect loss of <strong>in</strong>hibitorylocal circuits. 11 Application of the PET lig<strong>and</strong>flumazenil confirmed widespread cerebral reductions<strong>in</strong> γ-am<strong>in</strong>o butyric acid (GABA)-A receptorb<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> MND, crucially with relative preservation<strong>in</strong> those with a consistently more slowly progressivefamilial form of the disease (matched for disability<strong>and</strong> UMN <strong>in</strong>volvement). 12Blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD)functional MRI <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g a motor task, confirmedthe orig<strong>in</strong>al activation PET f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs (reviewed <strong>in</strong>[13]). However, it is now possible to analyse thespontaneous fluctuations <strong>in</strong> BOLD signal that occurat rest (as opposed to dur<strong>in</strong>g a motor task). This isbe<strong>in</strong>g explored as a potentially sensitive <strong>in</strong> vivomarker of pathology <strong>in</strong> several neurodegenerativedisorders. Diffusion tensor imag<strong>in</strong>g (DTI) is anestablished MRI technique that can be used to10 > ACNR > VOLUME 12 NUMBER 4 > SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2012

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