• Title of article

    Brain Cholesterol Metabolism and Its Defects: Linkage to Neurodegenerative Diseases and Synaptic Dysfunction

  • Author/Authors

    Petrov, A.M. Kazan Medical University, russia , Kasimov, M.R. Kazan Medical University, russia , Zefirov, A.L. Kazan Medical University, russia

  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    58
  • To page
    73
  • Abstract
    Cholesterol is an important constituent of cell membranes and plays a crucial role in the compart-mentalization of the plasma membrane and signaling. Brain cholesterol accounts for a large proportion of the body’s total cholesterol, existing in two pools: the plasma membranes of neurons and glial cells and the myelin membranes . Cholesterol has been recently shown to be important for synaptic transmission, and a link between cholesterol metabolism defects and neurodegenerative disorders is now recognized. Many neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by impaired cholesterol turnover in the brain. However, at which stage the choles-terol biosynthetic pathway is perturbed and how this contributes to pathogenesis remains unknown. Cognitive deficits and neurodegeneration may be associated with impaired synaptic transduction. Defects in cholesterol biosynthesis can trigger dysfunction of synaptic transmission. In this review, an overview of cholesterol turn-over under physiological and pathological conditions is presented (Huntington’s, Niemann-Pick type C diseases, Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome). We will discuss possible mechanisms by which cholesterol content in the plasma membrane influences synaptic processes. Changes in cholesterol metabolism in Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and autistic disorders are beyond the scope of this review and will be summarized in our next paper.
  • Farsi abstract
    فاقد چكيده فارسي
  • Keywords
    lipid rafts , neurodegenerative disease , oxysterols , synaptic transmission , cholesterol
  • Journal title
    Acta Naturae
  • Serial Year
    2016
  • Record number

    2615948