Unveiling the Journey from the Gut to the Brain: Decoding Neurodegeneration-Gut Connection in Parkinson’s Disease.

Unveiling the Journey from the Gut to the Brain: Decoding Neurodegeneration-Gut Connection in Parkinson’s Disease.

Publication date: Jun 19, 2024

Parkinson’s disease, a classical motor disorder affecting the dopaminergic system of the brain, has been as a disease of the brain, but this classical notion has now been viewed differently as the pathology begins in the gut and then gradually moves up to the brain regions. The microorganisms in the gut play a critical role in maintaining the physiology of the gut from maintaining barrier integrity to secretion of microbial products that maintain a healthy gut state. The pathology subsequently alters the normal composition of gut microbes and causes deleterious effects that ultimately trigger strong neuroinflammation and nonmotor symptoms along with characteristic synucleopathy, a pathological hallmark of the disease. Understanding the complex pathomechanisms in distinct and established preclinical models is the primary goal of researchers to decipher how exactly gut pathology has a central effect; the quest has led to many answered and some open-ended questions for researchers. We summarize the popular opinions and some contrasting views, concise footsteps in the treatment strategies targeting the gastrointestinal system.

Concepts Keywords
Classical Dopamine
Gastrointestinal Gut-microbiome
Neuroinflammation Oxidative stress
Parkinson Probiotics
Pathology Tyrosine hydroxylase

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Parkinson’s Disease
disease MESH causes
disease MESH neuroinflammation
drug DRUGBANK Dopamine
disease MESH Oxidative stress
drug DRUGBANK L-Tyrosine

Original Article

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