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1.
Mutations in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) are associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Mutant SOD1 causes a complex array of pathological events, through toxic gain of function mechanisms, leading to selective motor neuron degeneration. Mitochondrial dysfunction is among the well established toxic effects of mutant SOD1, but its mechanisms are just starting to be elucidated. A portion of mutant SOD1 is localized in mitochondria, where it accumulates mostly on the outer membrane and inside the intermembrane space (IMS). Evidence in cultured cells suggests that mutant SOD1 in the IMS causes mitochondrial dysfunction and compromises cell viability. Therefore, to test its pathogenic role in vivo we generated transgenic mice expressing G93A mutant or wild-type (WT) human SOD1 targeted selectively to the mitochondrial IMS (mito-SOD1). We show that mito-SOD1 is correctly localized in the IMS, where it oligomerizes and acquires enzymatic activity. Mito-G93ASOD1 mice, but not mito-WTSOD1 mice, develop a progressive disease characterized by body weight loss, muscle weakness, brain atrophy, and motor impairment, which is more severe in females. These symptoms are associated with reduced spinal motor neuron counts and impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics, characterized by decreased cytochrome oxidase activity and defective calcium handling. However, there is no evidence of muscle denervation, a cardinal pathological feature of ALS. Together, our findings indicate that mutant SOD1 in the mitochondrial IMS causes mitochondrial dysfunction and neurodegeneration, but per se it is not sufficient to cause a full-fledged ALS phenotype, which requires the participation of mutant SOD1 localized in other cellular compartments.  相似文献   

2.
The causes of motor neuron death in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are still unknown. Several lines of evidence suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction may be involved in the pathogenesis of ALS. Biochemical and morphological mitochondrial abnormalities have been demonstrated in postmortem spinal cords of ALS patients. Furthermore, in transgenic mice expressing mutant Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1), the antioxidant enzyme associated with familial ALS (FALS), mitochondrial abnormalities precede the disease onset, suggesting that mitochondrial dysfunction is causally involved in the pathogenesis of SOD1-FALS. Despite this evidence, it is not yet fully understood how mutant SOD1 damages mitochondria. Recent work has demonstrated that a portion of mutant SOD1 is localized in mitochondria, both in transgenic mice and in FALS patients, where it forms proteinaceous aggregates. These findings have opened new avenues of investigation addressing the hypothesis that mutant SOD1 may directly damage mitochondria. Major future challenges will be to better understand the mechanisms and the consequences of mitochondrial dysfunction in ALS. If mitochondrial dysfunction is convincingly involved in ALS pathogenesis, either as a primary cause or as contributing factor, it is likely to become a novel target for therapeutic intervention.  相似文献   

3.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative motor neuron disorder. Mutations in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) cause approximately 20% of familial ALS. One of the possible mechanisms whereby they induce disease is mitochondrial dysfunction in motor neurons. Here we describe a patient with ALS and muscle mitochondrial oxidative defect associated with a novel SOD1 mutation. Direct sequencing of SOD1 gene revealed a heterozygous mutation in codon 22 substituting a highly conserved amino acid, from glutamine to arginine (Q22R). Muscle biopsy showed a neurogenic pattern associated with cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency in several muscle fibers. Western blot analysis demonstrated a reduction in SOD1 content in the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial fractions. These results suggest that a minute quantity of mutant SOD1 protein contributes to a mitochondrial toxicity also in muscle tissue.  相似文献   

4.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease of motor neurons (MNs) that causes paralysis. Some forms of ALS are inherited, caused by mutations in the superoxide dismutase-1 (SOD1) gene. The mechanisms of human mutant SOD1 (mSOD1) toxicity to MNs are unresolved. Mitochondria in MNs might be key sites for ALS pathogenesis, but cause–effect relationships between mSOD1 and mitochondriopathy need further study. We used transgenic mSOD1 mice to test the hypothesis that the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) is involved in the MN degeneration of ALS. Components of the multi-protein mPTP are expressed highly in mouse MNs, including the voltage-dependent anion channel, adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT), and cyclophilin D (CyPD), and are present in mitochondria marked by manganese SOD. MNs in pre-symptomatic mSOD1-G93A mice form swollen megamitochondria with CyPD immunoreactivity. Early disease is associated with mitochondrial cristae remodeling and matrix vesiculation in ventral horn neuron dendrites. MN cell bodies accumulate mitochondria derived from the distal axons projecting to skeletal muscle. Incipient disease in spinal cord is associated with increased oxidative and nitrative stress, indicated by protein carbonyls and nitration of CyPD and ANT. Reducing the levels of CyPD by genetic ablation significantly delays disease onset and extends the lifespan of G93A-mSOD1 mice expressing high and low levels of mutant protein in a gender-dependent pattern. These results demonstrate that mitochondria have causal roles in the disease mechanisms in MNs in ALS mice. This work defines a new mitochondrial mechanism for MN degeneration in ALS.  相似文献   

5.
Mutations in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) cause familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS), a rapidly fatal motor neuron disease. Mutant SOD1 has pleiotropic toxic effects on motor neurons, among which mitochondrial dysfunction has been proposed as one of the contributing factors in motor neuron demise. Mitochondria are highly dynamic in neurons; they are constantly reshaped by fusion and move along neurites to localize at sites of high-energy utilization, such as synapses. The finding of abnormal mitochondria accumulation in neuromuscular junctions, where the SOD1-FALS degenerative process is though to initiate, suggests that impaired mitochondrial dynamics in motor neurons may be involved in pathogenesis. We addressed this hypothesis by live imaging microscopy of photo-switchable fluorescent mitoDendra in transgenic rat motor neurons expressing mutant or wild-type human SOD1. We demonstrate that mutant SOD1 motor neurons have impaired mitochondrial fusion in axons and cell bodies. Mitochondria also display selective impairment of retrograde axonal transport, with reduced frequency and velocity of movements. Fusion and transport defects are associated with smaller mitochondrial size, decreased mitochondrial density, and defective mitochondrial membrane potential. Furthermore, mislocalization of mitochondria at synapses among motor neurons, in vitro, correlates with abnormal synaptic number, structure, and function. Dynamics abnormalities are specific to mutant SOD1 motor neuron mitochondria, since they are absent in wild-type SOD1 motor neurons, they do not involve other organelles, and they are not found in cortical neurons. Together, these results suggest that impaired mitochondrial dynamics may contribute to the selective degeneration of motor neurons in SOD1-FALS.  相似文献   

6.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an incurable neurodegenerative disease leading to motor neuron cell death, but recent studies suggest that non-neuronal cells may contribute to the pathological mechanisms involved. Myostatin is a negative regulator of muscle growth whose function can be inhibited using neutralizing antibodies. In this study, we used transgenic mouse and rat models of ALS to test whether treatment with anti-myostatin antibody slows muscle atrophy, motor neuron loss, or disease onset and progression. Significant increases in muscle mass and strength were observed in myostatin-antibody-treated SOD1(G93A) mice and rats prior to disease onset and during early-stage disease. By late stage disease, only diaphragm muscle remained significantly different in treated animals in comparison to untreated controls. Myostatin inhibition did not delay disease onset nor extend survival in either the SOD1(G93A) mouse or rat. Together, these results indicate that inhibition of myostatin does not protect against the onset and progression of motor neuron degenerative disease. However, the preservation of skeletal muscle during early-stage disease and improved diaphragm morphology and function maintained through late stage disease suggest that anti-myostatin therapy may promote some improved muscle function in ALS.  相似文献   

7.
Motor neuron degeneration and skeletal muscle denervation are hallmarks of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), but other neuron populations and glial cells are also involved in ALS pathogenesis. We examined changes in inhibitory interneurons in spinal cords of the ALS model low-copy Gurney G93A-SOD1 (G1del) mice and found reduced expression of markers of glycinergic and GABAergic neurons, that is, glycine transporter 2 (GlyT2) and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65/67), specifically in the ventral horns of clinically affected mice. There was also loss of GlyT2 and GAD67 messenger RNA-labeled neurons in the intermediate zone. Ubiquitinated inclusions appeared in interneurons before 20 weeks of age, that is, after their development in motor neurons but before the onset of clinical signs and major motor neuron degeneration, which starts from 25 weeks of age. Because mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in glia might contribute to the pathogenesis, we also examined neuron-specific G93A-SOD1 mice; they also had loss of inhibitory interneuron markers in ventral horns and ubiquitinated interneuron inclusions. These data suggest that, in mutant SOD1-associated ALS, pathological changes may spread from motor neurons to interneuronsin a relatively early phase of the disease, independent of the presence of mutant SOD1 in glia. The degeneration of spinal inhibitory interneurons may in turn facilitate degeneration of motor neurons and contribute to disease progression.  相似文献   

8.
Overexpression of mutated superoxide dismutase (SOD1) in transgenic mice causes a progressive motor neuron degeneration in the spinal cord similar to that in human amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Ultrastructural analysis of motor neurons at different stages of the disease in transgenic C57BL/6 mice carrying the G93A mutation of SOD1 showed, at about 2 weeks of age, much earlier than the initial symptoms of the disease, microvacuoles in the cytoplasm, with marked swelling of the mitochondria. Nuclei with an apoptotic morphology were never observed in these motor neurons. Swollen mitochondria were also seen in the distal part of motor axons of phrenic nerves and in the large axons of sciatic nerves before the onset of the disease, but no mitochondrial alterations were seen in skeletal muscles or in the small sciatic nerve axons. Moreover, we found no apparent changes in the histochemical reactivity of cytochrome oxidase in motor neurons of transgenic mice even at the advanced stage of the disease, suggesting that partial neuronal activity in these cells may be maintained despite the altered mitochondria. Immunoreactivity for human SOD1 was high around vacuoles in the motor neurons of transgenic mice but no cytoplasmic intracellular SOD1 aggregates were observed. Our data indicate that mitochondrial swelling may be an important factor triggering the cascade leading to progressive motor neuron death. Activation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore may be involved in this process, through excitotoxicity or other neurotoxic stimuli.  相似文献   

9.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neuromuscular disorder, characterised by progressive motor neuron degeneration and muscle paralysis. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have significant cytoprotective properties in several models of neurodegeneration. To investigate the therapeutic potential of heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) in a mouse model of ALS, we conducted an extensive characterisation of transgenic mice generated from a cross between HSP27 overexpressing mice and mice expressing mutant superoxide dismutase (SOD1(G93A)). We report that SOD1(G93A)/HSP27 double transgenic mice showed delayed decline in motor strength, a significant improvement in the number of functional motor units and increased survival of spinal motor neurons compared to SOD1(G93A) single transgenics during the early phase of disease. However, there was no evidence of sustained neuroprotection affecting long-term survival. Marked down-regulation of HSP27 protein occurred during disease progression that was not associated with a reduction in HSP27 mRNA, indicating a translational dysfunction due to the presence of mutant SOD1 protein. This study provides further support for the therapeutic potential of HSPs in ALS and other motor neuron disorders.  相似文献   

10.
Progressive spinal axonal degeneration and slowness in ALS2-deficient mice   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
OBJECTIVE: Homozygous mutation in the ALS2 gene and the resulting loss of the guanine exchange factor activity of the ALS2 protein is causative for autosomal recessive early-onset motor neuron disease that is thought to predominantly affect upper motor neurons. The goal of this study was to elucidate how the motor system is affected by the deletion of ALS2. METHODS: ALS2-deficient mice were generated by gene targeting. Motor function and upper and lower motor neuron pathology were examined in ALS2-deficient mice and in mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) mice that develop ALS-like disease from expression of an ALS-linked mutation in SOD1. RESULTS: ALS2-deficient mice demonstrated progressive axonal degeneration in the lateral spinal cord that is also prominent in mutant SOD1 mice. Despite the vulnerability of these spinal axons, lower motor neurons in ALS2-deficient mice were preserved. Behavioral studies demonstrated slowed movement without muscle weakness in ALS2(-/-) mice, consistent with upper motor neuron defects that lead to spasticity in humans. INTERPRETATION: The combined evidence from mice and humans shows that deficiency in ALS2 causes an upper motor neuron disease that in humans closely resembles a severe form of hereditary spastic paralysis, and that is quite distinct from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.  相似文献   

11.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an adult onset neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive motor neuron degeneration in the brain and spinal cord leading to muscle atrophy, paralysis, and death. Mitochondrial dysfunction is a major contributor to motor neuron degeneration associated with ALS progression. Mitochondrial abnormalities have been determined in spinal cords of animal disease models and ALS patients. However, molecular mechanisms leading to mitochondrial dysfunction in sporadic ALS (sALS) patients remain unclear. Also, segmental or regional variation in mitochondrial activity in the spinal cord has not been extensively examined in ALS. In our study, the activity of mitochondrial electron transport chain complex IV was examined in post‐mortem gray and white matter of the cervical and lumbar spinal cords from male and female sALS patients and controls. Mitochondrial distribution and density in spinal cord motor neurons, lateral funiculus, and capillaries in gray and white matter were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Results showed that complex IV activity was significantly decreased only in gray matter in both cervical and lumbar spinal cords from ALS patients. In ALS cervical and lumbar spinal cords, significantly increased mitochondrial density and altered distribution were observed in motor neurons, lateral funiculus, and cervical white matter capillaries. Discrete decreased complex IV activity in addition to changes in mitochondria distribution and density determined in the spinal cord in sALS patients are novel findings. These explicit mitochondrial defects in the spinal cord may contribute to ALS pathogenesis and should be considered in development of therapeutic approaches for this disease.  相似文献   

12.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease that is characterized by progressive motor neuron degeneration and leads to death within a few years of diagnosis. One of the pathogenic mechanisms of ALS is proposed to be a dysfunction in the protein quality‐control machinery. Dorfin has been identified as a ubiquitin ligase (E3) that recognizes and ubiquitinates mutant SOD1 proteins, thereby accelerating their degradation and reducing their cellular toxicity. We examined the effects of human Dorfin overexpression in G93A mutant SOD1 transgenic mice, a mouse model of familial ALS. In addition to causing a decrease in the amount of mutant SOD1 protein in the spinal cord, Dorfin overexpression ameliorated neurological phenotypes and motor neuron degeneration. Our results indicate that Dorfin overexpression or the activation or induction of E3 may be a therapeutic avenue for mutant SOD1‐associated ALS. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by loss of upper and lower motor neurones leading to muscle weakness and paralysis. Despite recent advances in the genetics of ALS, the mechanisms underlying motor neurone degeneration are not fully understood. Mitochondria are known to be involved in the pathogenesis of ALS, principally through mitochondrial dysfunction, the generation of free radicals, and impaired calcium handling in ALS patients and models of disease. However, recent studies have highlighted the potential importance of altered mitochondrial morphology and defective axonal transport of mitochondria in ALS. Here, we review the evidence for mitochondrial involvement in ALS and discuss potential therapeutic strategies targeting mitochondria.  相似文献   

14.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder that involves mainly the motor neuron system. Five to 10 percent of the ALS cases are familial; most others are sporadic. Several mutations in the superoxide dismutase-1 (SOD1) gene have recently been shown to be associated with about 20% of familial ALS patients. The reduced enzyme activity of many mutant SOD1 points to the possibility that a loss-of-function effect of the mutant enzyme is responsible for the pathogenesis of the disease. However, this conflicts with the autosomal dominant inheritance of SOD1 mutation-associated ALS and the normal SOD1 activity in homozygous patients in a SOD1-linked ALS family. Current biochemical investigations have provided evidence that mutant SOD1 may catalyze the peroxynitrite-mediated nitration of protein tyrosine residues, release copper and zinc ions, facilitate apoptosis of neurons and have enhanced peroxidase activity. Immunocytochemical studies demonstrated the presence of intense SOD1 immunoreactivity in Lewy body-like inclusions, which are characteristic features of a certain form of familial ALS with posterior column involvement, in the lower motor neurons of patients in ALS families with different SOD1 mutations. More recently, strains of transgenic mice expressing mutant SOD1 have been established. These mice clinicopathologically develop a motor neuron disease mimicking human ALS with the exception of pronounced intraneuronal vacuolar degeneration. The overexpression of wild-type SOD1 in mice has failed to give rise to the disease. Only one transgene for mutant SOD1 is enough to cause motor neuron degeneration and the severity of clinical course correlates with the transgene copy number. These observations in SOD1-linked familial ALS and its transgenic mouse model suggest a novel neurotoxic function of mutant SOD1.  相似文献   

15.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder characterized by loss of upper and lower motor neurons. Different mechanisms contribute to the disease initiation and progression, including mitochondrial dysfunction which has been proposed to be a central determinant in ALS patho-genesis. Indeed, while mitochondrial defects have been mainly described in ALS-linked SOD1 mutants, it is now well established that mitochondria become also dysfunctional in other ALS conditions. In such con-text, the mitochondrial quality control system allows to restore normal functioning of mitochondria and to prevent cell death, by both eliminating and replacing damaged mitochondrial components or by degrading the entire organelle through mitophagy. Recent evidence shows that ALS-related genes interfere with the mitochondrial quality control system. This review highlights how ineffective mitochondrial quality control may render motor neurons defenseless towards the accumulating mitochondrial damage in ALS.  相似文献   

16.
Familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with mutations in the gene for superoxide dismutase‐1 (SOD1) is clinicopathologically reproduced by transgenic mice expressing mutant forms of SOD1 detectable in familial ALS patients. Motor neuron degeneration associated with SOD1 mutation has been thought to result from a novel neurotoxicity of mutant SOD1, but not from a reduction in activity of this enzyme, based on autosomal dominant transmission of SOD1 mutant familial ALS and its transgenic mouse model, clinical severity of the ALS patients independent to enzyme activity, no ALS‐like disease in SOD1 knockout or wild‐type SOD1‐over‐expressing mice, and clinicopathological severity of mutant SOD1 transgenic mice dependent on transgene copy numbers. Proposed mechanisms of motor neuron de‐generation such as oxidative injury, peroxynitrite toxicity, cytoskeletal disorganization, glutamate excitotoxicity, disrupted calcium homeostasis, SOD1 aggregation, car‐bonyl stress and apoptosis have been discussed. Intracy‐toplasmic vacuoles, indicative of increased oxidative damage to the mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum, in the neuropil and motor neurons appear in high expressors of mutant SOD1 transgenic mice but not in low expressors of the mice or familial ALS patients, suggesting that overexpression of mutant SOD1 in mice may enhance oxidative stress generation from this enzyme. Thus, transgenic mice carrying small transgene copy numbers of mutant SOD1 would provide a beneficial animal model for SOD1 mutant familial ALS. Such a model would contribute to elucidating the pathomechanism of this disease and establishing new therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of insulin like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) to prevent the pathophysiology associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is currently being explored with animal models and in clinical trials with patients. Several studies have reported positive effects of IGF-1 in reducing motor neuron death, delaying the onset of motor performance decline, and increasing life span, in SOD-1 mouse models of ALS and in one clinical trial. However, a second clinical trial produced no positive results raising questions about the therapeutic efficacy of IGF-1. To investigate the effect of specific and sustained IGF-1 expression in skeletal muscle or central nervous system on motor performance, life span, and motor neuron survival, human-IGF-1 transgenic mice were crossed with the G93A SOD-1 mutant model of ALS. No significant differences were found in onset of motor performance decline, life span, or motor neuron survival in the spinal cord, between SOD+/IGF-1+ and SOD+/IGF-1- hybrid mice. IGF-1 concentration levels, measured by radioimmunoassay, were found to be highly increased throughout life in the central nervous system (CNS) and skeletal muscle of IGF-1 transgenic hybrid mice. Additionally, increased CNS weight in SOD+ mice crossbred with CNS IGF-1 transgenic mice demonstrates that IGF-1 overexpression is biologically active even after the disease is fully developed. Taken together, these results raise questions concerning the therapeutic value of IGF-1 and indicate that further studies are needed to examine the relationship between methods of IGF-1 administration and its potential therapeutic value.  相似文献   

18.
Selective degeneration and death of motor neurons in SOD1 mutant-mediated amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is accompanied by axonal disorganization and reduced slow axonal transport in the three most frequently used mouse models of mutant SOD1-mediated ALS. To test whether suppression of axonal degeneration (frequently known as Wallerian degeneration) could slow disease development, we took advantage of a spontaneous mouse mutant Wld(s) (Wallerian degeneration slow) in which the programmed axonal degenerative process that is normally activated after axonal injury is significantly delayed. Despite its effectiveness in delaying axonal loss in other neurodegenerative models, the presence of Wld(s) did not slow disease onset, ameliorate mutant motor neuron death, axonal degeneration, or preserve synaptic attachments in mice that develop disease from ALS-linked SOD1 mutants SOD1G37R or SOD1G85R. However, presynaptic endings in both the presence and absence of Wld(s) showed high accumulations of mitochondria and synaptic vesicles, implicating errors of retrograde transport as a consequence of SOD1-mutant damage to axons.  相似文献   

19.
The pathogenesis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is poorly understood. Increased levels of free radicals derived from nitric oxide (NO), the product of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), may damage mitochondrial function leading to motor neurone death. Previous studies demonstrated a specific impairment of mitochondrial function in skeletal muscle of ALS patients. In order to verify a pathogenetic relationship between neuronal NOS (nNOS) and mitochondrial function, we studied nNOS expression by Western blot and mitochondrial enzyme activity by spectrophotometric assays in muscle biopsies of 16 sporadic ALS patients and 16 controls subjects. We observed a reduced activity of respiratory chain complexes with mitochondrial encoded subunits and a lower nNOS amount in ALS muscles. There was a direct correlation between levels of nNOS and values of mitochondrial enzymes function. In ALS muscles we found normal levels of manganese superoxide dismutase (SOD2) that is assumed as related to mitochondrial DNA abnormalities. Our data suggest a beneficial role for NO to mitochondrial function and lead to the hypothesis of a common oxidative damage in motor neurones and skeletal muscle in sporadic ALS patients.  相似文献   

20.
Mitochondrial pathology is an early observation in motor neurons and skeletal muscle of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). To clarify the relevance of this finding, we determined the effects of a 1-month oral administration of creatine on (1)H NMR-visible metabolites in the motor cortices of 15 controls and 15 patients with sporadic ALS, most of whom had mitochondrial pathology in skeletal muscle. In the motor cortex of the ALS group the N-acetylaspartate (NAA)/creatine (Cr(t)) metabolite ratio was lower than in our control group, indicating NAA loss. Upon creatine supplementation we observed in the controls a decline in the NAA/Cr(t), NAA/choline (Cho), glutamate + glutamine (Glx)/Cr(t), and Glx/Cho metabolite ratios. In contrast, in the ALS patient group the NAA/Cr(t) and the NAA/Cho metabolite ratios remained unchanged, while the Glx/Cr(t) and Glx/Cho metabolite ratios decreased. These data are compatible with the interpretation that creatine supplementation causes an increase in the diminished NAA levels in ALS motor cortex as well as an increase of choline levels in both ALS and control motor cortices. Because NAA is synthesized by mitochondria in an energy-dependent manner and the NAA/Cho metabolite ratios in the ALS motor cortices were found to be correlated to the degree of mitochondrial pathology in ALS skeletal muscle, our results can be explained by a deficiency of enzymes of mitochondrial respiratory chain in the ALS motor cortex which might affect motor neuron survival.  相似文献   

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