Resumen:
In the last few years, the involvement of poly (ADP-ribose)
(PAR) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) in the cellular death process
known as parthanatos, which is thought to underlie many neurodegenerative disorders1 has been gaining interest, mainly
because PARP inhibitors (drugs currently used as adjuvant
treatments in patients with oncologic diseases) could potentially
be repurposed as promising disease-modifying agents.2
In a recent study, Kam et al.3 describe a molecular cascade,
explaining a way in which α-synuclein (α-syn) aggregates produce
neurotoxicity both in vitro and in vivo. The authors investigated the
role of PARP-1 and PAR in α-syn-induced neurotoxicity. α-Syn
preformed fibrils (PFF) produced DNA damage through nitric oxide
(NO) production, causing the activation of DNA-repair enzyme
PARP-1, and an elevation in PAR, which induced cell death and
loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons with a consequent reduction in
motor performance. All of these changes could be avoided or
reduced in PARP-1 knockout (KO) or CRIPS-Cas9 deletion
models, as well as in mice treated with PARP-1 inhibitors. Another
observation of this study was that PAR bound to α-syn and facilitated its aggregation, producing more misfolded and compact strains,
resulting in higher resistance to enzymatic digestion, and proved to
be 25-times more neurotoxic than α-syn PFF alone. When added
to neuronal cultures or injected intrastriatally, PAR-α-syn PFF
induced earlier and greater deposition of α-syn, a higher rate of cell
death, and greater cell-to-cell transmission than α-syn PFF, also causing more prominent motor deficits. Finally, in PD patients, as compared to controls, PAR levels are elevated both in CSF and
substantia nigra, and correlate with disease severity and duration.
This study provides the first evidence for the potential role of
PARP-1 inhibition in modifying the course of α-synucleinopathies, by halting or reducing not only the deposition of α-syn, and
its more toxic PAR-bound strain, but probably its propagation
from cell-to-cell as well. The findings on PAR levels in CSF warrant further studies to evaluate its role as a potential biomarker of
disease progression and target engagement, critical to the development of future clinical trials in Parkinson’s disease and other
α-synucleinopathies. It may take time to translate these findings to
clinical practice, but one by one, the pieces are falling into place.