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RESEARCH PAPER ANALYSIS

HMGB1-mediated neuroinflammation: molecular mechanisms and emerging therapeutic approaches.

This review synthesizes evidence that redox- and modification-dependent extracellular HMGB1 drives neuroinflammation via TLR4/RAGE/CXCR4 and downstream NF-κB/MAPK/JAK-STAT/inflammasome pathways, links HMGB1 dysregulation to Parkinson's disease among other CNS disorders, and summarizes preclinical…

PMID41964823
JournalInflammopharmacology
Publication Date2026-04-11
Ingested2026-04-28 08:58 PM
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

What the AI sees

This review synthesizes evidence that redox- and modification-dependent extracellular HMGB1 drives neuroinflammation via TLR4/RAGE/CXCR4 and downstream NF-κB/MAPK/JAK-STAT/inflammasome pathways, links HMGB1 dysregulation to Parkinson's disease among other CNS disorders, and summarizes preclinical…

WHY IT MATTERS

Research significance

It highlights HMGB1 as a mechanistically actionable inflammatory node with multiple druggable approaches and existing preclinical tools that could be leveraged for PD neuroprotection and target validation, but cautions that overcoming BBB delivery, specificity, and clinical validation is essential…

ABSTRACT

Source abstract

High mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) has emerged as a central inflammatory mediator linking cellular stress and tissue injury to sustained neuroinflammation in the central nervous system. Although originally characterized as a nuclear chromatin-binding protein, HMGB1 acquires potent pro-inflammatory activity following cytoplasmic translocation and extracellular release, where it functions as a damage-associated molecular pattern. The inflammatory actions of HMGB1 are regulated by its redox state and post-translational modifications, which determine receptor engagement and downstream signaling. Extracellular HMGB1 interacts with pattern-recognition receptors including TLR4/MD-2, the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE), CXCR4, and nucleic acid-sensing Toll-like receptors, leading to activation of NF-κB, MAPK, JAK/STAT, and inflammasome pathways. These cascades amplify cytokine production, glial activation, oxidative stress, blood-brain barrier disruption, and neuronal dysfunction. Dysregulated HMGB1 signaling has been implicated in acute and chronic neurological disorders, including ischemic stroke, traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, and epilepsy. From a pharmacological perspective, HMGB1 has emerged as a potential therapeutic target, although most supporting evidence currently comes from preclinical studies and further clinical validation is required. Several strategies aimed at attenuating HMGB1-driven inflammation-such as neutralizing antibodies, direct HMGB1 inhibitors including glycyrrhizin, TLR4 and RAGE antagonists, natural anti-inflammatory compounds, and nanotechnology-based delivery systems-have demonstrated beneficial effects in experimental and preclinical models, but clinical validation remains limited. However, clinical translation remains limited by poor blood-brain barrier penetration, insufficient redox specificity, receptor redundancy, and a lack of well-designed human trials. This review summarizes current knowledge on HMGB1 biology, disease relevance, and therapeutic targeting, and highlights key challenges and future directions for HMGB1-based anti-inflammatory therapies in neuroinflammatory disorders.

SUPPORTING PAPER SET

32 more papers to review

Ranked by current scoring engine
1 The cGAS-STING-Glymphatic-gut Axis in Parkinson's disease: A proposed self-amplifying triad of Neuroinflammation and therapeutic opportunity. International immunopharmacology 91.0 2 Immunosenescence and Inflammaging as Drivers of Neurodegeneration: Cellular Mechanisms, Neuroimmune Crosstalk, and Therapeutic Implications. Cells 91.0 3 Flavonoids improve neurotransmitters for Parkinson's treatment: mechanism and therapeutic potential. Frontiers in pharmacology 88.0 4 Alpha-Lipoic Acid and Biotin in Neurodegenerative Diseases: Convergent Mechanistic Insights from Preclinical Models to Clinical Perspectives. Neurology international 78.0 5 The Gut Microbiota in Parkinson's Disease: Mechanistic Insights into Microbial-Host Interactions. Microorganisms 85.0 6 Linking inflammation, metabolic dysfunction, and neurodegeneration: a comprehensive review of TLR2 pathways in type 2 diabetes. Frontiers in clinical diabetes and healthcare 80.0 7 Neuroprotective effects of GLP-2 and a GLP-2/GIP dual receptor agonist in an MPTP-induced mouse model of Parkinson's disease. Peptides 86.0 8 TNF alpha unmasks enteric malate aspartate shuttle dysfunction bridging Parkinson disease and intestinal inflammation. Nature communications 91.5 9 Lipid Metabolism and Neurodegeneration: Mechanistic Insights and Therapeutic Targets. Ageing research reviews 82.0 10 Shared functional microbiome signatures in Parkinson's disease and constipation predominate irritable bowel syndrome despite taxonomic divergence. Brain, behavior, & immunity - health 80.0 11 Benzimidazole as a Versatile Scaffold for Developing Neurotherapeutics Against Neurodegenerative Diseases. ChemMedChem 74.0 12 Biomimicking neuromelanin reverses the gait deficits and dopaminergic neuronal loss in the Parkinson's disease. Colloids and surfaces. B, Biointerfaces 86.0 13 Neuroprotective roles of klotho: Molecular pathways and therapeutic implications for cognitive health in neurological and psychiatric diseases. Experimental physiology 84.0 14 Flavonoid Rutin Reduces Intestinal Inflammation in an Experimental Model of Parkinson's Disease. Neurotoxicity research 70.0 15 Nanostructured Lipid Carriers Enhance Brain Delivery and Antioxidant Efficacy of a Small-Molecule MAO B Inhibitor for Neurodegenerative Disease Therapy. Molecular pharmaceutics 78.0 16 Pathophysiological Role of the Gut Brain Axis in Parkinson's Disease: From Microbial Metabolites and Intestinal Permeability to Central Neuroinflammation. Current neurovascular research 86.0 17 Parkinson's Disease: From Metabolism to Genetics-A Comprehensive Review. Current issues in molecular biology 86.0 18 Navigating the cholesterol maze: Key insights on use of statins in neurodegenerative disorders. Neuroprotection (Chichester, England) 76.0 19 Integrative network pharmacology delineates dual GPCR and non-GPCR mechanisms of blended and individual Taikong Blue lavender and Pingyin rose essential oils in neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders. Computers in biology and medicine 65.0 20 Models of neuroprotection in Parkinson's disease: Exploring cellular, molecular, and microenvironmental targets. Experimental neurology 78.0 21 Hyaluronic acid: emerging roles and biomaterial innovations in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease therapy. Frontiers in pharmacology 75.2 22 Molecular mechanisms underlying Parkinson's disease and role of phytochemicals, α-synuclein, sirtuins, and incretin mimetics in potential therapy. Frontiers in pharmacology 75.0 23 Lipid droplets in neurodegenerative diseases: pathological drivers and therapeutic vulnerabilities. Cell death discovery 82.0 24 Brain-gut-microbiota axis: a review on the bidirectional regulatory mechanisms between gut microbiota and brain and their disease interactions. Frontiers in microbiology 74.0 25 Long non-coding RNAs in neurodegenerative diseases - Molecular mechanisms, liquid biopsy biomarkers, and therapeutic targets: A review. Biomolecules & biomedicine 84.0 26 Neurosyphilis and Parkinsonism: Overlapping Pathophysiology and Emerging Therapeutic Insights. Current neurovascular research 76.0 27 Molecular biochemistry of soluble epoxide hydrolase in lipid mediator pathways and neuroinflammatory responses. The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology 82.0 28 Multifaceted role of CNPY2 beyond ER stress: Disease implications and therapeutic potential. Cell stress 83.3 29 Neuroprotective Role of Exercise-based Physiotherapy Combined with Pharmacological Agents in Parkinson's Disease. Central nervous system agents in medicinal chemistry 64.0 30 Distinct metabolomic and proteomic signatures in Parkinson's disease patients with REM sleep behavior disorder. Signal transduction and targeted therapy 84.0 31 Beyond acid-base dyshomeostasis: Dynamic instability of neuronal lysosomal pH as a pathogenic mechanism and therapeutic target in neurological diseases. Biochemical pharmacology 88.0 32 Vitamins as Modulators of Neurodegenerative Disease Pathways: Mechanisms and Therapeutic Perspectives. Nutrients 74.0
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