Emerging Trends in the Field of Inflammation and Proteinopathy in ALS/FTD Spectrum Disorder

Biomedicines. 2023 May 31;11(6):1599. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines11061599.

Abstract

Proteinopathy and neuroinflammation are two main hallmarks of neurodegenerative diseases. They also represent rare common events in an exceptionally broad landscape of genetic, environmental, neuropathologic, and clinical heterogeneity present in patients. Here, we aim to recount the emerging trends in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal degeneration (FTD) spectrum disorder. Our review will predominantly focus on neuroinflammation and systemic immune imbalance in ALS and FTD, which have recently been highlighted as novel therapeutic targets. A common mechanism of most ALS and ~50% of FTD patients is dysregulation of TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43), an RNA/DNA-binding protein, which becomes depleted from the nucleus and forms cytoplasmic aggregates in neurons and glia. This, in turn, via both gain and loss of function events, alters a variety of TDP-43-mediated cellular events. Experimental attempts to target TDP-43 aggregates or manipulate crosstalk in the context of inflammation will be discussed. Targeting inflammation, and the immune system in general, is of particular interest because of the high plasticity of immune cells compared to neurons.

Keywords: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; frontotemporal degeneration; inflammation; neurodegenerative diseases; proteinopathy.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

I.M.: this work was supported by the Croatian Science Foundation IP-2018-01-8563 and the University of Rijeka grant 18-211-1369. F.D.M., L.M.: No dedicated funding. F.D.M., L.M.: This work was supported by the AGING Project for the Department of Excellence at the Department of Translational Medicine (DIMET), Università del Pie-monte Orientale, Novara, Italy. B.R. and J.N. were supported by the Slovenian Research Agency (grant numbers N3-0141, J3-9263, J3-4503, J3-3065, and P4-0127). S.H.: This work was supported by the Croatian Science Foundation project neuroNiPiC (grant number IP-2016-06-2799) and the Hubert Curien “COGITO” programme (grant number 57794).