Roles of autophagy-mediated alpha-synuclein clearance in the development of Parkinson disease
Parkinson disease(PD)is a common chronic neurodegenerative disease that seriously affects the quality of life of patients and has become an important population health problem in society.The typical neuropathological feature of PD is the abnormal aggregation of α-synuclein(α-Syn)in the substantia nigra-striatal region,causing dopaminergic degenerative necrosis of neurons.With further research,it was found that cellular autophagy mediated the clearance process of pathological α-Syn involved in the pathogene-sis of PD.Autophagy is an important pathway for cells to remove abnormal aggregated proteins and senes-cence-damaged organelles,and autophagic removal of abnormal α-Syn deposition can maintain cellular home-ostasis and protect dopaminergic neurons.In addition,impaired autophagy causes α-Syn aggregation,increa-ses α-Syn propagation in the brain,promotes the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons,and is involved in the development of PD.PD-related genes affect autophagy regulation,and mutations in related genes can lead to impaired lysosomal function to block autophagy.At the same time,abnormal aggregation of α-Syn further dis-rupts the autophagy process,reduces the autophagic clearance capacity,and increases the accumulation of neurotoxicity.Impaired autophagy and abnormal α-Syn aggregation are important mechanisms of degeneration in nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons.Therefore,studies targeting autophagy and abnormal α-Syn aggregation may provide new ideas for the pathogenesis of PD,and reducing α-Syn accumulation by increasing autophagic flux may become a key target for the treatment of PD.