1. Glutamate in ALS
There is evidence from many directions suggesting excess excitotoxicity
in ALS, probably from glutamate. Glutamate is a stimulatory chemical released
from some nerve endings to carry the nerve signal from one neuron to the next
in a chain. It is also released if nervous tissue is damaged. Too much glutamate
over stimulates neurons, and can cause them to die.
Perhaps the strongest evidence for there being excess glutamate
in ALS comes from Dr. Jeffrey Rothstein's work showing a partial deficiency
of the glial glutamate uptake transporter GLT1. This transporter is present
on supporting glial cells around neurons, and is responsible for removing
glutamate by absorbing it into the glial cells. If there is insufficient GLT1,
there will be excess glutamate to over stimulate neurons, predisposing them
to early death.
It is uncertain how this deficiency of GLT1 arises. Studies
have predominantly used autopsy tissue. To learn more about glutamate in ALS,
we have undertaken studies of ALS patients' brains in life using MRI spectroscopy.
Using a regular clinical MRI machine with spectroscopy capacity, we have shown
that in the motor cortex and brainstem of the brains of ALS patients there
is a progressive loss of a chemical, N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), that is a marker
of the number and health of nerve cells. We searched for evidence of an increased
signal from glutamate and glutamine in motor cortex and brainstem of ALS patients.
Accurate estimation of the amount of these chemicals requires a higher field-strength
magnet MRI than we have available, but our findings suggest that the total
levels of glutamate and glutamine, which includes both intracellular and extracellular,
are decreased.
Work from other laboratories indicates that GLT1 is a complex
protein that exists in several different forms in ALS and normal nervous system
tissue, and that there are no mutations of the gene for GLT1 that have been
found to cause the decreased level of GLT1 protein. Clearly we need a much
greater understanding of the role of glutamate excitotoxicity in ALS.
2. Surrogate Markers for ALS
Currently we have no laboratory test available to prove that
a patient has ALS, except in the 1 to 2% of patients with mutations of the
gene for superoxide dismutase -1 (SOD1). Also currently the only marker of
disease progression is the extent of the abnormal neurological signs measured
by a Neurologist, such as the amount of muscle weakness, muscle wasting, breathing
tests, and reflex changes. Programs to discover drugs to treat ALS use these
abnormal neurological signs to measure rates of disease progression. However,
because ALS is so variable, drug trials need very large numbers of patients.
It may take a trial of 2,000 patients treated for 18 months to prove whether
a drug works or not.
It would greatly assist progress in diagnosing and monitoring
ALS, and in new drug development if we had a marker that was relatively specific
and sensitive for ALS, and which changed as the disease progressed. We and
others have used MR spectroscopy to study NAA, a chemical present in neurons.
The motor cortex levels of NAA fall as ALS progresses. Other research groups
have found that treatment with riluzole that slows ALS disease progression
raise the levels of NAA slightly, though we could not confirm that. More research
is clearly needed to find a reliable surrogate marker for ALS to assist in
programs for more rapid screening of drugs that may benefit ALS.
3. Oxidative Damage in ALS
Though oxygen is essential to advanced life forms, it is also
potentially toxic. It appears that when primordial life forms appeared, they
did so in the "primeval ooze" at the bottom of the oceans where
the oxygen concentration was much less than in the atmosphere today. All cells
of humans have a complex system of enzymes and other substances designed to
control the effect of oxygen. One of these enzymes is SOD1. Discovery of mutations
of SOD1 in about 20% of patients with familial ALS increased awareness that
damage of motor neurons by excess oxygen free radicals may be a cause of ALS.
Other research groups have shown that there is oxidative damage of proteins
and other macromolecules in the nervous tissue of ALS patients.
Somewhat surprising to all of us was the finding by several
other research groups that in fact oxidative damage is not the mechanism by
which SOD1 mutations produce the motor neuron degeneration in ALS. A great
deal of research is under way to find exactly how the mutant SOD1 protein
damages the cells.
Mitochondria are intimately concerned with using oxygen in cells
to produce energy, and they play a role in controlling oxidative damage within
cells. Other research groups have shown that the mitochondria show structural
changes in the nervous tissues of ALS patients and animal models. We have
a basic research program studying the mitochondria in cells from ALS patients
and animal models of ALS. This research is producing evidence that neuronal
mitochondria in mouse models of ALS are more susceptible to lack of oxygen
than normal neurons. We are studying the mitochondria to learn more about
their role in ALS.