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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Machado–Joseph disease (MJD) or spinocerebellar ataxia 3 (SCA3) is a rare, inherited,
monogenic, neurodegenerative disease, and the most common SCA worldwide. MJD/SCA3 causative
mutation is an abnormal expansion of the triplet CAG at exon 10 within the ATXN3 gene. The gene
encodes for ataxin-3, which is a deubiquitinating protein that is also involved in transcriptional
regulation. In normal conditions, the ataxin-3 protein polyglutamine stretch has between 13 and
49 glutamines. However, in MJD/SCA3 patients, the size of the stretch increases from 55 to 87,
contributing to abnormal protein conformation, insolubility, and aggregation. The formation of
aggregates, which is a hallmark of MJD/SCA3, compromises different cell pathways, leading to an
impairment of cell clearance mechanisms, such as autophagy. MJD/SCA3 patients display several
signals and symptoms in which the most prominent is ataxia. Neuropathologically, the regions
most affected are the cerebellum and the pons. Currently, there are no disease-modifying therapies,
and patients rely only on supportive and symptomatic treatments. Due to these facts, there is a
huge research effort to develop therapeutic strategies for this incurable disease. This review aims to
bring together current state-of-the-art strategies regarding the autophagy pathway in MJD/SCA3,
focusing on evidence for its impairment in the disease context and, importantly, its targeting for the
development of pharmacological and gene-based therapies.
Description
Keywords
Machado–Joseph disease Sspinocerebellar ataxia type 3 Autophagy Ataxin-3 Neurodegeneration
Citation
International Journal of Molecular Sciences 24 (8): 7405 (2023)
Publisher
MDPI