Affiliation:
1. Neuroscience Program, Biology Department, University of Hartford, West Hartford, CT 06117, United States
Abstract
An inverse correlation between the incidence of cancer and neurodegenerative disease
has been observed, with the prevalence of cancer peaking around 60 years of age, then slowly tapering
off as neurodegenerative diseases increase in the elderly. Although the diseases rarely occur
concurrently, the same genes are differentially expressed between the diseases, with four transcription
factors found to be in common for their expression. In the brain, mature astrocytes are the
origin of astrocytoma, which make up 58.2% of malignant brain tumors in patients 65 or older,
while GFAP+ astrocyte-like neural stem cells from the subventricular zone give rise to glioblastoma
and anaplastic astrocytoma, which make up 41.6%. Likewise, in neurodegenerative disease, a decrease
in astrocyte density is observed in early disease states, and senescent astrocytes increase.
Because astrocytes coordinate synaptic function, astrocyte dysfunction likely contributes to or causes
initial synapse loss and cognitive decline seen in neurodegenerative disease. In non-disease
states, astrocytes retain their ability to successfully re-enter the cell cycle through adult astrogenesis
to maintain the neuroenvironment, and controlled astrocytic proliferation could be an important
contributor to neurological function. Disruption to this astrogenic balance could account for the
inverse correlation of cell cycle dysregulation resulting in malignant astrocytes and tumorigenesis,
and astrocytic senescence and cell death without self-renewal in aging resulting in neurodegenerative
disease. The current understanding of the astrocytic roles of the transcription factors that could
be the cause of this imbalance will be discussed, as well as possible therapeutic approaches to modulate
their expression in the astrocyte.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology,Neurology,Pharmacology,General Medicine
Cited by
8 articles.
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