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Calcium Dysregulation in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Calcium Dysregulation in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Introduction
Calcium Dysregulation In Neurodegenerative Diseases represents a key pathological mechanism in neurodegenerative diseases. This page explores the molecular and cellular processes involved, their contribution to disease progression, and therapeutic implications.
Calcium Dysregulation Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
Calcium homeostasis is disrupted in all major neurodegenerative diseases with distinct patterns: [@therapeutic2023]
| Feature | Alzheimer's Disease (AD) | Parkinson's Disease (PD) | ALS | Huntington's Disease (HD) | Prion Disease |
|---------|-------------------------|-------------------------|-----|--------------------------|---------------|
| Primary Defect | ER Ca²⁺ leak, NMDA overactivation | Cav1.3 channel dysfunction | Motor neuron Ca²⁺ dysregulation | Mutant [htt](/proteins/huntingtin) affects Ca²⁺ channels | PrP Sc alters Ca²⁺ signaling |
| Store Release | Increased ER release | Impaired store-operated entry | Altered | Increased | Elevated |
| Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ | Overload → apoptosis | Overload → mitophagy failure | Overload | Elevated | Variable |
| Extracellular Ca²⁺ | NMDA-mediated influx | Reduced buffer capacity | Excitotoxic influx | Increased | Variable |
| Key Channels Affected | NMDA, VGCC | L-type (Cav1.3) | P/Q-type, NMDA | TRPM4, VGCC | Multiple |
| Cell Death Pathway | Calpain activation | [Ferroptosis](/entities/ferroptosis) + apoptosis | Excitotoxicity | Calcineurin activation | ER stress |
Calcium Dysregulation in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Introduction
Calcium Dysregulation In Neurodegenerative Diseases represents a key pathological mechanism in neurodegenerative diseases. This page explores the molecular and cellular processes involved, their contribution to disease progression, and therapeutic implications.
Calcium Dysregulation Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
Calcium homeostasis is disrupted in all major neurodegenerative diseases with distinct patterns: [@therapeutic2023]
| Feature | Alzheimer's Disease (AD) | Parkinson's Disease (PD) | ALS | Huntington's Disease (HD) | Prion Disease |
|---------|-------------------------|-------------------------|-----|--------------------------|---------------|
| Primary Defect | ER Ca²⁺ leak, NMDA overactivation | Cav1.3 channel dysfunction | Motor neuron Ca²⁺ dysregulation | Mutant [htt](/proteins/huntingtin) affects Ca²⁺ channels | PrP Sc alters Ca²⁺ signaling |
| Store Release | Increased ER release | Impaired store-operated entry | Altered | Increased | Elevated |
| Mitochondrial Ca²⁺ | Overload → apoptosis | Overload → mitophagy failure | Overload | Elevated | Variable |
| Extracellular Ca²⁺ | NMDA-mediated influx | Reduced buffer capacity | Excitotoxic influx | Increased | Variable |
| Key Channels Affected | NMDA, VGCC | L-type (Cav1.3) | P/Q-type, NMDA | TRPM4, VGCC | Multiple |
| Cell Death Pathway | Calpain activation | [Ferroptosis](/entities/ferroptosis) + apoptosis | Excitotoxicity | Calcineurin activation | ER stress |
Disease-Specific Calcium Mechanisms
Alzheimer's Disease
- ER dysfunction: Presenilin mutations cause ER Ca²⁺ leak
- Excitotoxicity: Aβ enhances NMDA receptor activity
- Mitochondria: Ca²⁺ overload triggers apoptosis
- Therapeutic: NMDA antagonists, calcium channel blockers
Parkinson's Disease
- Channelopathy: Cav1.3 (L-type) autoimmunity in some cases
- Pacemaking stress: SNpc neurons rely on Ca²⁺ influx
- Mitochondria: Ca²⁺-mitochondria coupling impaired
- Therapeutic: Isradipine (Ca²⁺ blocker) tested
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Excitotoxicity: Glutamate-induced Ca²⁺ influx
- Calcium buffer deficiency: Reduced calbindin in motor neurons
- ER stress: TDP-43 affects calcium stores
- Therapeutic: Riluzole (reduces glutamate release)
Huntington's Disease
- Channel alterations: Mutant htt affects multiple Ca²⁺ channels
- ER-mitochondria coupling: Enhanced Ca²⁺ transfer
- Calcineurin activation: Contributes to transcriptional dysfunction
- Therapeutic: Memantine (NMDA antagonist) trials
Calcium-Targeting Therapeutics
| Drug | Target | Disease | Status |
|------|--------|---------|--------|
| Memantine | NMDA receptor | AD, HD | Approved (AD) |
| Isradipine | Cav1.3 L-type | PD | Phase 3 failed |
| Nimodipine | L-type | AD | Ineffective |
| Riluzole | Glutamate release | ALS | Approved |
| Ziconotide | N-type VGCC | Pain | Approved |
| [Donepezil](/entities/donepezil) | AChE + Ca²⁺ | AD | Approved |
Overview
Calcium (Ca²⁺) dysregulation is a fundamental pathological mechanism shared across Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and other neurodegenerative disorders. Calcium serves as a critical second messenger controlling neuronal survival, synaptic plasticity, neurotransmitter release, and gene expression. Disruption of calcium homeostasis leads to mitochondrial dysfunction, ER stress, activation of apoptotic pathways, and ultimately neuronal death [1](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tins.2019.03.006).
This integration page examines calcium dysregulation mechanisms across neurodegenerative diseases, the consequences of altered calcium signaling, and therapeutic strategies targeting calcium homeostasis.
Calcium Signaling in the Brain
Calcium Homeostasis
[Neurons](/entities/neurons) maintain cytosolic calcium at ~100 nM (resting) while extracellular calcium is ~1-2 mM and ER calcium is ~0.1-0.5 mM. This gradient is maintained by:
Calcium entry channels:
- Voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs)
- NMDA receptors
- AMPA receptors
- Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels
- Store-operated calcium entry (SOCE)
- Plasma membrane calcium ATPase (PMCA)
- Sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX)
- Mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU)
- Calcium-binding proteins (calbindin, parvalbumin, calretinin)
- ER calcium stores (SERCA pumps)
- Mitochondrial calcium uptake
Disease-Specific Calcium Dysregulation
Alzheimer's Disease
Calcium dysregulation is an early feature in AD pathogenesis:
Amyloid-beta and calcium: [Aβ](/proteins/amyloid-beta) forms calcium-permeable channels in the plasma membrane and disrupts calcium homeostatic mechanisms. Aβ activates NMDA receptors, leading to calcium influx [2](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tins.2019.03.007).
Presenilin and calcium: [PSEN1](/entities/psen1) and [PSEN2](/entities/psen2) mutations affect ER calcium stores. PSEN1 mutations cause increased ER calcium release through IP3 and ryanodine receptors.
[Tau](/proteins/tau) pathology: Hyperphosphorylated tau affects calcium handling by disrupting cytoskeleton and membrane proteins.
Synaptic calcium: Enhanced calcium entry through hyperactive NMDA receptors contributes to excitotoxicity.
Key calcium dysregulation in AD:
- Elevated resting cytosolic calcium
- Reduced calcium buffering capacity
- ER calcium store depletion
- Mitochondrial calcium overload
See [Protein Aggregation Comparison](/mechanisms/protein-aggregation-comparison) for detailed information.
Parkinson's Disease
Calcium dysregulation is central to dopaminergic neuron vulnerability:
Dopamine metabolism: Dopamine oxidation generates reactive species that damage calcium handling proteins.
Substantia nigra vulnerability: Dopaminergic neurons have unique calcium handling properties that make them vulnerable to calcium dysregulation.
[α-Synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein) and calcium: Mutant α-synuclein affects ER calcium homeostasis and mitochondrial calcium handling.
Environmental toxins: MPTP, rotenone, and 6-OHDA disrupt calcium homeostasis.
Key calcium dysregulation in PD:
- Increased basal calcium in dopaminergic neurons
- Mitochondrial calcium overload
- Altered SOCE
- Reduced calcium buffering
Key genes in PD calcium:
- SNCA - α-Synuclein
- PARK9 - ATP13A2 (lysosomal calcium)
- GCH1 - GTP cyclohydrolase 1
ALS
Calcium dysregulation contributes to motor neuron degeneration:
Excitotoxicity: Excessive glutamate release and impaired uptake lead to calcium influx through NMDA and AMPA receptors.
Mutant SOD1: Directly affects calcium handling by mitochondria and ER.
TDP-43 pathology: Affects calcium channel expression and function.
Mitochondrial calcium: Motor neurons are particularly sensitive to mitochondrial calcium overload.
Key calcium dysregulation in ALS:
- Elevated resting calcium
- Impaired calcium extrusion
- ER calcium depletion
- Mitochondrial calcium dysregulation
See [TDP-43 Proteinopathy](/mechanisms/tdp-43-proteinopathy) for detailed information.
Key genes in ALS calcium:
- SOD1 - Superoxide dismutase 1
- TARDBP - TDP-43
- FUS - Fused in sarcoma
- [C9orf72](/entities/c9orf72) - Dipeptide repeat proteins
Common Mechanisms of Calcium Dysregulation
Mitochondrial Calcium Overload
Mitochondria buffer calcium loads during synaptic activity. However, excessive calcium uptake leads to:
- Mitochondrial permeability transition: Pore opening releases cytochrome c
- ATP depletion: Calcium-induced mitochondrial dysfunction reduces ATP
- [ROS](/entities/reactive-oxygen-species) generation: Calcium increases mitochondrial ROS production
- [Apoptosis](/entities/apoptosis) activation: Calcium triggers intrinsic apoptotic pathways
See [Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-neurodegeneration) for detailed information.
ER Calcium Depletion
The ER is a major calcium store. ER calcium depletion triggers:
- ER stress: [UPR](/entities/unfolded-protein-response) activation
- Apoptotic signaling: CHOP expression
- Protein folding impairment: Calcium-dependent chaperone function
- [Autophagy](/entities/autophagy) disruption: [mTOR](/mechanisms/mtor-signaling-pathway)-independent autophagy activation
See [ER Stress and Unfolded Protein Response](/mechanisms/er-stress-upr-neurodegeneration) for detailed information.
Excitotoxicity
Excessive glutamate leads to pathological calcium influx:
- [NMDA receptor](/entities/nmda-receptor) overactivation: Pathological calcium influx
- AMPA receptor dysfunction: Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors
- Glutamate transport impairment: Reduced glutamate clearance
- Metabotropic glutamate receptor signaling: mGluR1/5 activation
Oxidative Stress
Calcium and oxidative stress form a positive feedback loop:
- ROS and calcium channels: Oxidative modification of calcium channels
- Calcium-induced ROS: Mitochondrial calcium increases ROS
- NADPH oxidase activation: Calcium activates NOX
- Calcium pump oxidation: Oxidative damage to PMCA and SERCA
See [Oxidative Stress in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/oxidative-stress-neurodegeneration) for detailed information.
Therapeutic Strategies
Calcium Channel Blockers
L-type calcium channel blockers:
- Nimodipine: FDA-approved for subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Isradipine: In trials for PD
- Calsenilin modulators
- Memantine: FDA-approved for AD
- Ifenprodil: NR2B-selective antagonist
- Ethosuximide: In trials
- Z944: In trials
Calcium Buffering Enhancement
Calbindin upregulation:
- Gene therapy approaches
- Small molecule inducers
- Viral vector delivery
Mitochondrial Calcium Modulators
MCU inhibitors:
- Ruthenium red
- Ru360
- In development
Antioxidant Approaches
- CoQ10: Supports mitochondrial function
- MitoQ: Mitochondria-targeted antioxidant
- Alpha-lipoic acid: Antioxidant with calcium-modulating properties
ER Calcium Modulation
- SERCA activators: In development
- IP3 receptor modulators: In development
- Ryanodine receptor modulators: In development
Key Genes in Calcium Homeostasis
- CALB1 - Calbindin
- PVALB - Parvalbumin
- CALM1 - Calmodulin
- ATP2A2 - SERCA2
- ATP2B1 - PMCA1
- SLC8A1 - NCX1
- MCU - Mitochondrial calcium uniporter
- GRIN1 - NMDA receptor subunit
- GRIN2A - NMDA receptor subunit
- CACNA1A - P/Q-type calcium channel
- CACNA1C - L-type calcium channel
- TRPM1 - Transient receptor potential
Calcium-Induced Apoptosis Pathway
Calcium dysregulation triggers the intrinsic (mitochondrial) apoptotic pathway through multiple interconnected mechanisms.
Apoptosis in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Alzheimer's Disease: Calcium overload triggers mitochondrial apoptosis through:
- Cytochrome c release
- Caspase-9 → caspase-3 activation
- DNA fragmentation
- Mitochondrial calcium buffering impairment
- PINK1/Parkin pathway disruption
- Apoptosis induced by oxidative stress
- Excitotoxicity-mediated calcium influx
- Mitochondrial dysfunction
- ER stress-induced apoptosis
See [Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-neurodegeneration) for detailed mitochondrial pathways.
Cross-Links to Related Mechanisms
- [Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction-neurodegeneration)
- [ER Stress and Unfolded Protein Response](/mechanisms/er-stress-upr-neurodegeneration)
- [Oxidative Stress in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/oxidative-stress-neurodegeneration)
- [Neuroinflammation Across AD/PD/ALS](/mechanisms/neuroinflammation-ad-pd-als)
- [Excitotoxicity in Neurodegeneration](/excitotoxicity-in-neurodegeneration)
See Also
- [Neurodegeneration](/diseases/neurodegeneration) — General mechanisms
External Links
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
Background
The study of Calcium Dysregulation In Neurodegenerative Diseases has evolved significantly over the past decades. Research in this area has revealed important insights into the underlying mechanisms of neurodegeneration and continues to drive therapeutic development.
Historical context and key discoveries in this field have shaped our current understanding and will continue to guide future research directions.
Recent Research Updates (2024-2026)
This section highlights recent publications relevant to this mechanism.
- [Synaptic mitochondria in aging and neurodegenerative diseases: Functional decline and vulnerability.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40536922/) (2026 Jun 1) - Neural regeneration research
- [Dysregulation of store-operated calcium entry in fibroblast lines from adult and juvenile-onset Huntington's disease patients.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41557250/) (2026 Apr) - Pharmacological reports : PR
- [Miro1 in Parkinson's Disease: A Key Regulator of Mitochondrial Homeostasis and Neurodegeneration.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41792389/) (2026 Mar 7) - Neuromolecular medicine
- [A Meta-analysis to Identify Common Key Genes Across Ageing, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41797877/) (2026 Mar 6) - Annals of neurosciences
- [Targeting the FNIP2-SERCA2b axis improves metabolic and mitochondrial defects in Ataxia Telangiectasia.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41771847/) (2026 Mar 2) - Cell death & disease
Calpain Activation Pathway
Calpain activation represents a critical downstream effect of calcium dysregulation in neurodegeneration. Calcium-activated calpains are calcium-dependent cysteine proteases that contribute to neuronal damage through multiple mechanisms.
Calpain Activation Mechanism
Calpains require micromolar concentrations of calcium for activation, which is achieved during pathological calcium dysregulation:
Calpain Substrates in Neurodegeneration
| Substrate | Function | Consequence of Cleavage |
|-----------|----------|------------------------|
| Spectrin | Cytoskeletal scaffold | Membrane damage, axonal degeneration |
| MAP2 | Microtubule stabilization | Dendritic loss |
| p35/CDK5 | Neuronal cell cycle control | Aberrant cell cycle re-entry |
| Apaf-1 | Apoptosis machinery | Caspase-9 activation |
| PARP-1 | DNA repair | Energy depletion |
| NMDA receptor | Glutamate signaling | Excitotoxicity amplification |
| AMPA receptor | Glutamate signaling | Synaptic dysfunction |
Calpain in Disease Context
Alzheimer's Disease: Aβ oligomers stimulate NMDA receptor activation, leading to calcium influx and calpain activation. Calpain cleaves p35 to p25, hyperactivating CDK5 and contributing to tau pathology.
Parkinson's Disease: Calcium dysregulation in dopaminergic neurons activates calpain, contributing to mitochondrial dysfunction and α-synuclein cleavage, generating toxic fragments.
ALS: Motor neurons with reduced calcium buffering capacity are particularly vulnerable to calpain-mediated proteolysis. Mutant SOD1 affects calpain regulation.
Therapeutic Implications
Calpain inhibitors have shown neuroprotective potential in preclinical models:
- MDL-28170: Blood-brain barrier penetrant calpain inhibitor
- ALLN: Proteasome/calpain inhibitor
- Natural compounds: Curcumin modulates calpain activity
See [Excitotoxicity in Neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity-neurodegeneration) for related pathways.
Calcium Dysregulation in Specific Neurodegenerative Diseases
Alzheimer's Disease
Calcium dysregulation in AD involves multiple interconnected mechanisms [1]:
- ER calcium store depletion leads to capacitative calcium entry
- NMDA receptor overactivation causes excitotoxicity
- Amyloid-beta channels allow calcium influx across membranes
- Mitochondrial calcium overload triggers apoptosis
- Calcineurin overactivity leads to tau hyperphosphorylation
Parkinson's Disease
Calcium dysregulation in PD has unique features [2]:
- L-type calcium channels (Cav1.3) cause dopaminergic neuron vulnerability
- Mitochondrial calcium buffering is impaired
- Alpha-synuclein interacts with calcium-binding proteins
- NLRP3 inflammasome activation is calcium-dependent
- PAR1-mediated signaling disrupts calcium homeostasis
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
ALS shows calcium dysregulation through [3]:
- Motor neuron excitability leading to glutamate excitotoxicity
- AMPA receptor permeability to calcium
- Mitochondrial dysfunction affecting calcium handling
- Astrocytic glutamate transport impairment
Calcium Signaling Pathways
Major Calcium Entry Channels
| Channel Type | Function | Role in Neurodegeneration |
|-------------|----------|---------------------------|
| L-type VGCC | Depolarization-coupled Ca²⁺ entry | Vulnerability in PD |
| NMDA receptors | Glutamate-gated Ca²⁺ entry | Excitotoxicity in AD |
| AMPA receptors | Fast excitatory transmission | ALS excitotoxicity |
| TRPM channels | Non-selective Ca²⁺ entry | Various roles |
| VGCC P/Q-type | Presynaptic Ca²⁺ entry | Synaptic dysfunction |
Calcium Homeostasis Mechanisms
Therapeutic Targets
Calcium Channel Modulators
| Target | Drug/Approach | Status |
|--------|--------------|--------|
| L-type Ca²⁺ channels | Dihydropyridines | Research phase |
| NMDA receptors | Memantine | Approved for AD |
| mGluR5 | Negative allosteric modulators | Research |
| TRPM2 | Inhibitors | Preclinical |
Calcium-Regulated Pathways
- Calpain inhibitors prevent calcium-dependent proteolysis
- Calcineurin inhibitors affect tau phosphorylation
- CaMKII modulation may protect synapses
Cross-Linking
Related Mechanisms
- [Mitochondrial Dysfunction](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dysfunction) - Calcium overload
- [Oxidative Stress](/mechanisms/oxidative-stress) - ROS from calcium
- [Excitotoxicity](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity) - Glutamate and calcium
- [Neuroinflammation](/mechanisms/neuroinflammation-microglia-pathway) - Calcium in inflammation
Calcium Dysregulation and Synaptic Failure
Synaptic dysfunction is an early hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases, and calcium dysregulation plays a central role in compromising synaptic integrity and function[@synaptic2019].
Presynaptic Calcium Dysregulation
At presynaptic terminals, calcium influx triggers neurotransmitter release through synaptotagmin-mediated exocytosis. Calcium dysregulation disrupts this process through multiple mechanisms:
- Synaptotagmin dysfunction: Calcium-binding proteins that trigger release are affected by calpain cleavage
- Vesicle pool depletion: Impaired calcium signaling reduces vesicle recycling
- Excitatory/inhibitory imbalance: Altered calcium dynamics shift the balance toward hyperexcitability or hypoexcitability
Postsynaptic Calcium Dysregulation
Postsynaptic dendrites and spines rely on calcium for plasticity mechanisms:
- NMDA receptor overactivation: Causes pathological calcium influx
- AMPA receptor trafficking: Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors accumulate in disease states
- Dendritic spine loss: Calcium dysregulation triggers spine elimination
- LTP impairment: Calcium-dependent plasticity mechanisms are compromised
Calcium and Neurotransmitter Systems
Calcium dysregulation affects multiple neurotransmitter systems:
Glutamate:
- Excitotoxicity through NMDA/AMPA receptor overactivation
- Reduced glutamate uptake by astrocytes
- Altered metabotropic glutamate receptor signaling
- Impaired GABAergic inhibition contributes to network hyperexcitability
- Reduced calbindin in interneurons increases vulnerability
- Dopaminergic neuron calcium handling is unique due to pacemaking
- Calcium-dependent dopamine oxidation generates ROS
- Levodopa treatment may worsen calcium dysregulation
- Cholinergic neuron vulnerability in AD relates to calcium dysregulation
- Muscarinic receptor signaling is calcium-dependent
Calcium Dysregulation and Protein Aggregation
Calcium and Amyloid-Beta
Aβ and calcium dysregulation form a pathogenic feed-forward loop:
Calcium and Alpha-Synuclein
α-Synuclein aggregation is connected to calcium homeostasis:
- Calcium binding may promote α-synuclein aggregation
- ER calcium depletion increases cytosolic calcium
- Calpain cleavage generates toxic α-synuclein fragments
Calcium and Tau
Tau pathology intersects with calcium signaling:
- Calpain activation generates truncated tau species
- Calcium-dependent kinases hyperphosphorylate tau
- Tau affects calcium channel function
Genetic Factors in Calcium Dysregulation
AD Genes and Calcium
| Gene | Protein | Effect on Calcium |
|------|---------|-------------------|
| APP | Amyloid precursor protein | Aβ channels, NMDA modulation |
| PSEN1 | Presenilin 1 | ER calcium leak |
| PSEN2 | Presenilin 2 | ER calcium regulation |
| APOE | Apolipoprotein E | Calcium homeostasis |
PD Genes and Calcium
| Gene | Protein | Effect on Calcium |
|------|---------|-------------------|
| SNCA | α-Synuclein | ER calcium, mitochondrial calcium |
| LRRK2 | Leucine-rich repeat kinase | Calcium channel phosphorylation |
| PINK1 | PTEN-induced kinase | Mitochondrial calcium |
| PARK9 | ATP13A2 | Lysosomal calcium |
| GBA | Glucocerebrosidase | Calcium homeostasis |
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Implications
Calcium-Related Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Utility | Status |
|-----------|---------|--------|
| CSF calcium | Disease progression | Research |
| Calcium-binding proteins | Neuronal loss | Research |
| Calpain-cleaved substrates | Disease activity | Research |
Calcium-Targeting Therapies in Development
Channel Blockers:
- Renin inhibitors: Target ASIC channels
- TRPM2 inhibitors: For oxidative stress-related calcium influx
- SERCA activators: Restore ER calcium
- Calbindin inducers: Enhance buffering
- Calcium modulation + anti-amyloid
- Calcium modulation + neuroprotection
Research Frontiers
Calcium Imaging Advances
- Two-photon microscopy: Real-time calcium imaging in vivo
- Genetically encoded calcium indicators (GECIs): Advanced sensor technology
- FRET-based sensors: Molecular-level calcium detection
Therapeutic Target Validation
- Human iPSC models: Patient-derived neurons for drug testing
- CRISPR screening: Identify calcium-related therapeutic targets
- Single-cell RNAseq: Characterize calcium dysregulation at cellular resolution
References
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Calcium Dysregulation in Neurodegenerative Diseases discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
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