DNA damage response in neurodegeneration is an important component in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
The DNA damage response (DDR) is a critical cellular surveillance mechanism that maintains genomic integrity by detecting DNA lesions, activating repair pathways, and orchestrating cell cycle checkpoints. Key DNA repair proteins implicated in neurodegeneration include PRKDC (DNA-PKcs), XRCC6 (Ku70), XRCC5 (Ku80), and PARP1. In neurodegenerative diseases, progressive accumulation of DNA damage contributes to neuronal dysfunction and cell death. This pathway page explores the molecular mechanisms by which DNA damage accumulates in neurons, how impaired DNA repair promotes neurodegeneration, and therapeutic strategies targeting DDR components.
Neurons are particularly vulnerable to DNA damage due to their high metabolic activity, post-mitotic state, and exposure to reactive oxygen species. The major types of DNA damage affecting neurons include:
DNA damage response in neurodegeneration is an important component in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
The DNA damage response (DDR) is a critical cellular surveillance mechanism that maintains genomic integrity by detecting DNA lesions, activating repair pathways, and orchestrating cell cycle checkpoints. Key DNA repair proteins implicated in neurodegeneration include PRKDC (DNA-PKcs), XRCC6 (Ku70), XRCC5 (Ku80), and PARP1. In neurodegenerative diseases, progressive accumulation of DNA damage contributes to neuronal dysfunction and cell death. This pathway page explores the molecular mechanisms by which DNA damage accumulates in neurons, how impaired DNA repair promotes neurodegeneration, and therapeutic strategies targeting DDR components.
Neurons are particularly vulnerable to DNA damage due to their high metabolic activity, post-mitotic state, and exposure to reactive oxygen species. The major types of DNA damage affecting neurons include:
| Damage Type | Source | Repair Pathway | Neurodegenerative Relevance |
|-------------|--------|----------------|----------------------------|
| Oxidative lesions (8-oxoG) | ROS from metabolism | Base excision repair (BER) | AD, PD, ALS |
| Single-strand breaks | Oxidative stress, repair intermediates | BER, SSB repair | AD, PD |
| Double-strand breaks | Radiation, oxidative stress, replication stress | NHEJ, HR | ALS, Ataxias |
| DNA base alkylation | Endogenous metabolites | Direct reversal, BER | AD, Aging |
| Interstrand crosslinks | Oxidative stress, environmental | Fanconi anemia pathway | ALS, Huntington's |
| Telomere shortening | Replicative aging | Telomerase, alternative lengthening | Aging, AD |
PARP1/PARP2 (Poly ADP-ribose polymerases)
| Pathway | Substrates | Key Proteins | Neuronal Role |
|---------|------------|--------------|---------------|
| Base excision repair (BER) | Oxidative damage, alkylation | OGG1, NTH1, PARP1, Pol β, Lig III | Critical for removing 8-oxoG and ROS damage |
| Nucleotide excision repair (NER) | UV damage, bulky adducts | XPA-G, TFIIH, ERCC1 | Repair of transcription-blocking lesions |
| Mismatch repair (MMR) | Replication errors | MSH2/6, MLH1, PMS2 | Implicated in triplet repeat expansion |
| Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) | DSB | Ku70/80, DNA-PKcs, Ligase IV | Primary DSB repair in neurons |
| Homologous recombination (HR) | DSB in S/G2 | RAD51, BRCA1/2, PALB2 | Limited in post-mitotic neurons |
| Direct reversal | Alkylation | MGMT, ALKBH2/3 | Quick repair of specific damage |
In AD, DNA damage accumulates through multiple mechanisms:
DNA damage in PD is linked to:
DNA damage accumulation in ALS:
DNA damage in HD:
| Strategy | Target | Compound/Approach | Status |
|----------|--------|-------------------|--------|
| PARP inhibition | PARP1/2 | Olaparib, rucaparib | Preclinical AD/PD |
| p53 modulation | p53 | Pifithrin-α | Preclinical |
| BER enhancement | Pol β, Lig III | Gene therapy approaches | Research |
| NER enhancement | XPA, TFIIH | Small molecule activators | Research |
| Telomerase activation | Telomerase | TA-65, gene therapy | Aging research |
| Biomarker | Detection | Disease | Utility |
|-----------|-----------|---------|---------|
| 8-oxoG in CSF | ELISA, mass spec | AD, PD | Diagnostic |
| γH2AX foci | Immunohistochemistry | ALS, PD | Research |
| Tail moment (Comet assay) | Single cell gel electrophoresis | All | Research |
| p53 phosphorylation | Western blot | AD, PD | Prognostic |
| ATM activation | Immunohistochemistry | Ataxias | Diagnostic |
The DNA damage response intersects with multiple neurodegenerative pathways:
🟡 Medium Confidence
| Dimension | Score |
|-----------|-------|
| Supporting Studies | 5 verified references |
| Contradicting Evidence | 0% |
| Mechanistic Completeness | 70% |
Overall Confidence: 65%
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving DNA Damage Response in Neurodegeneration discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis: