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Neumann M, Sampathu DM, Kwong LK, Truax AC, Micsenyi MC, Chou TT, Bruce J, Schuck T, Grossman M, Clark CM, McCluskey LF, Miller BL, Masliah E, Mackenzie IR, Feldman H, Feiden W, Kretzschmar HA, Trojanowski JQ, Lee VM. Ubiquitinated TDP-43 in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Science. 2006 Oct 6;314(5796):130-3. PubMed.
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Memory and Aging Center
From a clinical perspective, the identification of TDP-43 protein represents a major breakthrough in our understanding of both frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The TDP-43 is the mystery protein that is associated with the ubiquitin-positive inclusions that are commonly found in many patients with FTLD and in most, if not all, patients with ALS.
This finding is particularly important because several recent papers suggest that patients who have FTLD with ubiquitin inclusions at autopsy (FTLD-U) account for approximately 50 percent of all autopsy-confirmed FTLD cases (1-3). The remaining majority of FTLD cases are associated with the tau protein, but other neuropathological diagnoses exist. The finding that possibly one-half of all FTLD patients may have ubiquitin-positive neuropathology means that any breakthroughs in the biology of this protein could potentially translate into helping a large proportion of FTLD patients.
In addition, the finding that the TDP-43 protein is also found in patients with ALS further supports the overlap between FTLD and ALS. Future research on the TDP-43 protein will likely also benefit ALS patients and help us understand how these two very different clinical phenotypes are related.
References:
Lipton AM, White CL, Bigio EH. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration with motor neuron disease-type inclusions predominates in 76 cases of frontotemporal degeneration. Acta Neuropathol. 2004 Nov;108(5):379-85. PubMed.
Johnson JK, Diehl J, Mendez MF, Neuhaus J, Shapira JS, Forman M, Chute DJ, Roberson ED, Pace-Savitsky C, Neumann M, Chow TW, Rosen HJ, Forstl H, Kurz A, Miller BL. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration: demographic characteristics of 353 patients. Arch Neurol. 2005 Jun;62(6):925-30. PubMed.
Forman MS, Farmer J, Johnson JK, Clark CM, Arnold SE, Coslett HB, Chatterjee A, Hurtig HI, Karlawish JH, Rosen HJ, Van Deerlin V, Lee VM, Miller BL, Trojanowski JQ, Grossman M. Frontotemporal dementia: clinicopathological correlations. Ann Neurol. 2006 Jun;59(6):952-62. PubMed.
View all comments by Julene K. JohnsonUniversity of Manchester
In this paper, Drs. Lee and Trojanowski and colleagues have at long last identified the mystery protein hiding within the ubiquitinated inclusions that characterize certain histological forms of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), termed FTLD-U. This task has challenged neuroscientists for well over a decade, with all prior attempts at identification using immunohistochemical or biochemical methods proving fruitless. The culprit protein is a TAR DNA-binding protein, known as TDP-43. This protein is present within all the ubiquitinated structures in FTLD-U, viz., the neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, the neuronal intranuclear inclusions, and the neuritic changes, though whether this is the sole component of these structures (other than ubiquitin) remains uncertain. Some previous studies reported the presence of p62 protein within neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, but such findings have been inconsistent. Moreover, Lee and Trojanowski have shown that the ubiquitinated neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions seen within spinal and cranial nerve nuclear motor neurons in motor neuron disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) also contain TDP-43.
This is an immensely important study with huge implications for neurobiology.
Firstly, it pinpoints a key biochemical constituent in the pathogenesis of FTLD-U and motor neuron disease (MND), and one which previous work would never have regarded as a likely candidate protein.
Secondly, although an association between FTLD and MND had long been known on account of some cases showing defined clinical features of both disorders, sharing pathological features of both disorders, and families being known where some members had FTLD, others MND, and others the combined disorder, it was never clear whether this association was coincidental or causal. Now we can see causality, and the implication that FTLD and MND are part and parcel of the same disease spectrum will have major ramifications for understanding pathogenesis, and eventual treatment.
Thirdly, the finding of TDP-43 pathological changes in FTLD patients with mutations in the newly identified progranulin (PGRN) gene, who typically show FTLD-U pathological changes, firmly brings together a causal relationship in these two fundamental proteins in driving the pathogenesis of the disorder, and opens up untapped vistas of neurobiological research.
Therefore, in rapid time, two major (protein) pieces in the jigsaw puzzle of FTLD have been identified. The challenge now will be to fit the pieces around these and eventually identify the linking processes that bring these together into the fuller picture. Nonetheless, it is clear that even within FTLD-U there are different histological and clinical phenotypes, and it will be necessary to dissect out biochemical or other factors that might determine where the TDP-43 pathological changes take place in the brain to produce the clinical phenotype. That is, why is it that in some patients the most common clinical manifestation of FTLD-U, frontotemporal dementia, is present in association with bilateral involvement of the frontal and temporal lobes, yet in others only the temporal lobes are affected—producing semantic dementia—and in others the left hemisphere is preferentially affected to give progressive non-fluent aphasia. Also, what determines whether TDP-43 changes will be in the brainstem and spinal cord to give MND, or in the cerebral cortex to give FTLD? Lastly, in all this flurry of excitement, it should not be forgotten that tauopathy is still a major cause of FTLD, and it is not immediately apparent how pathological changes in the expression or function of tau might link in with progranulin and TDP-43. Clearly, changes in all three molecules can produce the same disorder of FTLD either separately or collectively: it is not possible to unequivocally discriminate FTD patients with MAPT mutations from those with PGRN mutations, or others without mutations in either. Interrelationships within this Bermuda triangle of tau, progranulin, and TDP-43 will need to be addressed.
The identification of TDP-43 as a (major/sole) component of the ubiquitinated protein of FTLD and MND, in conjunction with the identification of mutations in PGRN, have opened up huge new fields within the neurobiology of neurodegenerative disease with tentacles that may stretch far wider than these two disorders themselves. Whether there is a role for either or both of these proteins in other disorders like Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease remains to be seen. The gauntlet has been cast down—it is up to the neuroscience community to pick this up and address these issues. What is certain is that there will be a major change in the focus of neurobiological research as groups worldwide seek to investigate the implications of changes in proteins such as progranulin and TDP-43 in terms of health and disease. We can look forward within the near future to major advances in our understanding of how the brain works in respect of these molecules and why neurodegenerative disease occurs when they fail to function properly. Maybe even a treatment for neurodegenerative disease may come a little closer.
View all comments by David M.A. Mann