Urea cycle dysregulation drives metabolic stress and neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease.

尿素循环失调是帕金森病中代谢压力和神经退行性变的主要驱动因素

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作者:Zhang Shengyao, Wan Guoran, Qiu Yu, Zhang Meng, Deng Hongmei, Wang Qiongfang, Hu Junyi, Gui Jie, Chen Dilong, Huang Boyue, Ran Jianhua
Parkinson's disease (PD), common neurodegenerative disorder, involves substantia nigra dopaminergic neuron loss and α-synuclein accumulation in Lewy bodies. While pathogenesis remains unclear, dysregulated urea metabolism may play a central role. This study detected elevated serum urea levels in PD patients with upregulated urea cycle enzymes. In MPTP-induced PD mice, urea accumulated in the substantia nigra and striatum, alongside increased activity of urea cycle enzymes (ODC1, ARG1, OTC) and urea transporter UT-B. Mechanistically, brain urea accumulation likely stems from imbalanced urea cycle activity and impaired UT-B-mediated clearance, with compensatory UT-B upregulation specifically in the substantia nigra. In vitro, MPTP-treated neuronal cells showed increased enzyme and UT-B expression, while high urea directly suppressed tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Importantly, ODC1 knockdown reversed urea dysmetabolism, restored TH, and alleviated neuronal damage. These findings establish ODC1-mediated urea cycle dysregulation as a core metabolic feature of PD, proposing ODC1 or urea metabolism as novel therapeutic targets.

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