疾病中的应激和分子伴侣。

A J Macario, E Conway de Macario
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引用次数: 66

摘要

压力是当今社会的一种普遍现象,人们怀疑它在疾病的发展中起着重要作用。各种各样的压力源,心理的、生理的和生物的,比比皆是。它们存在于工作和社会环境中,存在于空气、土壤、水、食物和药品中。应激源直接或间接影响细胞,引起蛋白质变性,引发应激反应。这是由应激(热休克)基因和蛋白质介导的,其中被称为分子伴侣的基因和蛋白质,因为它们帮助其他蛋白质实现和保持功能形状(天然结构),并在因应激而部分丢失时恢复它。变性的蛋白质容易聚集和沉淀。由于突变或转录后或翻译后机制失败而导致的异常蛋白也会发生同样的情况。这些异常蛋白质和变性分子一样需要分子伴侣的帮助,尤其是在压力下。一个具有正常抗应激机制的细胞,包括一套完整的、功能性的伴侣蛋白,如果应激的强度不超过导致不可逆转的蛋白质损伤的程度,就可能能够承受应激。正常细胞有一定的阈值,超过这个阈值,它们就无法应对压力。一个具有异常蛋白质的细胞,其内在倾向于错误折叠和聚集,比正常的细胞更容易受到压力的影响。此外,即使在没有压力的情况下,这些异常蛋白质也可能沉淀并引起称为蛋白质病的疾病。即使在具有正常陪伴系统的细胞中,应激也可能通过促进蛋白质聚集而促进蛋白质病变的发病机制。蛋白质病的例子是与年龄相关的退行性疾病,蛋白质沉积在各种组织中,最重要的是在大脑中,沉积与神经元变性有关。可以想象,压力通过促进蛋白质的展开和错误折叠,从而导致聚集和沉积,从而促进了这些疾病的进展。在过去的几年里,一些报告描述了旨在阐明热休克蛋白,特别是分子伴侣蛋白在神经退行性疾病发病机制中的作用的研究。这些发现开始揭示蛋白质聚集和沉积的分子机制,以及随后的细胞死亡。这些结果也开始阐明分子伴侣在发病机制中的作用。这是一个令人着迷的研究领域,具有重大的临床意义。虽然已经有了几种研究蛋白质病变的实验模型,但应该利用现在比几年前更为人所知的、具有独特优势的生物体来开发其他模型。利用这些系统和从基因组测序工作中获得的数据库信息,将促进这一领域的研究。在不久的将来,基于热休克蛋白和分子伴侣基因和蛋白质的使用,应该有可能开发出治疗和预防蛋白质病变的手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stress and molecular chaperones in disease.

Stress, a common phenomenon in today's society, is suspected of playing a role in the development of disease. Stressors of various types, psychological, physical, and biological, abound. They occur in the working and social environments, in air, soil, water, food, and medicines. Stressors impact on cells directly or indirectly, cause protein denaturation, and elicit a stress response. This is mediated by stress (heat-shock) genes and proteins, among which are those named molecular chaperones because they assist other proteins to achieve and maintain a functional shape (the native configuration), and to recover it when partially lost due to stress. Denatured proteins tend to aggregate and precipitate. The same occurs with abnormal proteins due to mutations, or to failure of post-transcriptional or post-translational mechanisms. These abnormal proteins need the help of molecular chaperones as much as denatured molecules do, especially during stress. A cell with normal antistress mechanisms, including a complete and functional set of chaperones, may be able to withstand stress if its intensity is not beyond that which will cause irreversible protein damage. There is a certain threshold that normal cells have above which they cannot cope with stress. A cell with an abnormal protein that has an intrinsic tendency to misfold and aggregate is more vulnerable to stress than normal counterparts. Furthermore, these abnormal proteins may precipitate even in the absence of stress and cause diseases named proteinopathies. It is possible that stress contributes to the pathogenesis of proteinopathies by promoting protein aggregation, even in cells that possess a normal chaperoning system. Examples of proteinopathies are age-related degenerative disorders with protein deposits in various tissues, most importantly in the brain where the deposits are associated with neuronal degeneration. It is conceivable that stress enhances the progression of these diseases by facilitating protein unfolding and misfolding, which lead to aggregation and deposition. A number of reports in the last few years have described research aimed at elucidating the role of heatshock proteins, molecular chaperones in particular, in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders. The findings begin to shed light on the molecular mechanism of protein aggregation and deposition, and of the ensuing cell death. The results also begin to elucidate the role of molecular chaperones in pathogenesis. This is a fascinating area of research with great clinical implications. Although there are already several experimental models for the study of proteinopathies, others should be developed using organisms that are better known now than only a few years ago and that offer unique advantages. Use of these systems and of information available in databases from genome sequencing efforts should boost research in this field. It should be possible in the not-too-distant future to develop therapeutic and preventive means for proteinopathies based on the use of heat-shock protein and molecular chaperone genes and proteins.

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