News Release

Breakthrough review links hormone receptors to age-related brain disease prevention

Scientists uncover complex interplay between liver X and thyroid hormone receptors, offering new therapeutic possibilities for neurodegenerative disorders

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Genomic Press

Liver X receptors (LXRs) and related neurological disorders.

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Liver X receptors (LXRs) and related neurological disorders.

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Credit: Margaret Warner , Xiaoyu Song, and Jan-Åke Gustafsson

Houston, Texas – In a comprehensive review published in the October 2024 issue of Genomic Psychiatry, researchers have unveiled crucial insights into how two types of hormone receptors collaborate to maintain brain health and potentially prevent neurodegenerative diseases.

The study, led by Professor Jan-Åke Gustafsson and colleagues at the University of Houston and Karolinska Institutet, demonstrates that liver X receptors (LXRs) and thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) work together in a previously unrecognized manner to regulate critical brain functions and protect against neurodegeneration.

"Our analysis reveals that LXRs and TRs don't represent parallel pathways but rather constitute a single pathway through which the thyroid hormone endocrine system regulates cholesterol homeostasis," explains Professor Margaret Warner, one of the study's lead authors. "This discovery could fundamentally change how we approach treatment for various neurodegenerative conditions."

Key findings include:

• LXRs play a crucial role in regulating thyroid hormone function in the brain

• Both receptors are essential for normal brain development and maintenance

• Loss of LXR function leads to age-related neurodegeneration in multiple brain regions

• The receptors work together to maintain cholesterol balance in the brain

The review highlights several promising therapeutic implications:

1. Alzheimer's Disease: LXR activation could help reduce amyloid plaque formation and improve memory

2. Parkinson's Disease: LXR signaling appears to protect dopamine-producing neurons

3. ALS: LXRs influence motor neuron survival and function

4. Multiple Sclerosis: The receptors play crucial roles in myelin repair and maintenance

"What's particularly intriguing is the age-dependent nature of these protective effects," notes Dr. Xiaoyu Song, co-author of the study. "Understanding why certain neurons become vulnerable to degeneration as we age could be key to developing preventive treatments."

The research raises several compelling questions for future investigation:

How might targeting both receptor systems simultaneously enhance therapeutic outcomes? Could early intervention through these pathways prevent or delay the onset of neurodegenerative diseases? What role do different receptor variants play in different brain regions?

The full Genomic Psychiatry peer-reviewed article “Liver X and thyroid hormone receptors in neurodegeneration,” is available on 24 October 2024 in Genomic Psychiatry. The article is freely available online at https://gp.genomicpress.com/aop/ or https://url.genomicpress.com/yf5vx6bf

About Genomic PsychiatryGenomic Psychiatry: Advancing Science from Genes to Society (ISSN: 2997-2388) represents a paradigm shift in genetics journals by interweaving advances in genomics and genetics with progress in all other areas of contemporary psychiatry. Genomic Psychiatry publishes peer-reviewed papers of the highest quality from any area within the continuum that goes from genes and molecules to neuroscience, clinical psychiatry, and public health.


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