Cytoprotective mechanism of cerebro-cognitive reserve
A. Sidenkova

TL;DR
This paper explores how the brain's cytoprotective mechanisms, like the vitagene system, help maintain cellular health and protect against neurodegenerative diseases.
Contribution
The paper introduces the vitagene system as a novel neurohormetic target for cytoprotective interventions in neurodegeneration.
Findings
The vitagene system produces cytoprotective proteins like Hsp70 and heme oxygenase-1 that combat oxidative stress.
Heat shock proteins and chaperone complexes help prevent protein aggregation and support mitochondrial function.
Modulating endogenous proteins through diet or drugs could enhance cellular resilience in neurodegenerative diseases.
Abstract
Consideration of the reserve problem would be incomplete without an analysis of the cytoprotective mechanism. The predominant molecular hallmark of aging and degeneration is the accumulation of altered gene products. Moreover, several conditions, including protein, lipid, or glucose oxidation, disrupt redox homeostasis and lead to the accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins in the aging brain in case of AD, and other neurodegenerative diseases that have as a common denominator abnormal protein production, mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress. Some authors classify aging, pathological aging, and neurodegeneration as “protein conformational diseases”. scientific publications analytical review The central nervous system has evolved a conserved unfolded protein response mechanism to cope with the accumulation of misfolded proteins. As one of the main intracellular redox…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsS100 Proteins and Annexins
