Alzheimer's disease: ageing-related or age-related? New hypotheses from an old debate

被引:6
作者
Bugiani, Orso [1 ]
机构
[1] Ist Neurol Carlo Besta, I-20133 Milan, Italy
关键词
Alzheimer's disease; Ageing; Age; Beta-protein; Tau-protein; AMYLOID-BETA-PEPTIDE; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; TRANSGENIC MICE; PRECURSOR PROTEIN; NEUROFIBRILLARY TANGLES; TAU-PHOSPHORYLATION; CENTENARIAN BRAINS; SENILE-DEMENTIA; EARLY-ONSET; APP;
D O I
10.1007/s10072-011-0614-4
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The view that Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a fatal outcome of ageing prevails over the view that it mainly affects people aged 75-95. The former is based on the exponential increase in the incidence of AD with ageing, while the latter on AD prevalence rates. Both views share the idea that neurofibrillary degeneration (NFD) is secondary to the loading of beta-protein (A beta) and its more toxic species in nervous tissue that occurs with ageing in everybody, but is greater in people predisposed to AD. They differ in terms of the complexity attributed to the concept of neuronal vulnerability to A beta. In the ageing-related hypothesis, it is seen as a phylogenetic characteristic of neurons that predisposes some of them to A beta-dependent NFD, which spreads from the more vulnerable allocortex to the less vulnerable neocortex and accordingly causes memory decline progressing to dementia. To adapt this to the discontinuity of AD prevalence, it is necessary to see neuronal vulnerability as being modulated by additional ontogenetic factors that make some vulnerable neurons more or less sensitive to A beta toxicity. This may give the A beta/NFD relationship enough flexibility to explain the cognitive reserve of the oldest old and the phenotypical variability of AD, in particular why it is that the clinical onset of AD may be characterised by focal signs other than memory loss. Introducing this concept offers a new perspective of AD pathogenesis based on the role played by A beta and related proteins in nerve cell selection during brain development and adult neurogenesis.
引用
收藏
页码:1241 / 1247
页数:7
相关论文
共 86 条
[61]   Prevalence of dementia in an elderly rural population: Effects of age, sex, and education [J].
Prencipe, M ;
Casini, AR ;
Ferretti, C ;
Lattanzio, MT ;
Fiorelli, M ;
Culasso, F .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1996, 60 (06) :628-633
[62]   Aβ Amyloid and Glucose Metabolism in Three Variants of Primary Progressive Aphasia [J].
Rabinovici, Gil D. ;
Jagust, William J. ;
Furst, Ansgar J. ;
Ogar, Jennifer M. ;
Racine, Caroline A. ;
Mormino, Elizabeth C. ;
O'Neil, James P. ;
Lal, Rayhan A. ;
Dronkers, Nina F. ;
Miller, Bruce L. ;
Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2008, 64 (04) :388-401
[63]   Tau is essential to β-amyloid-induced neurotoxicity [J].
Rapoport, M ;
Dawson, HN ;
Binder, LI ;
Vitek, MP ;
Ferreira, A .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (09) :6364-6369
[64]   THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND THE PREVALENCE OF SENILE DEMENTIA - A METAANALYSIS OF RECENT DATA [J].
RITCHIE, K ;
KILDEA, D ;
ROBINE, JM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1992, 21 (04) :763-769
[65]   IS SENILE DEMENTIA AGE-RELATED OR AGING-RELATED - EVIDENCE FROM METAANALYSIS OF DEMENTIA PREVALENCE IN THE OLDEST-OLD [J].
RITCHIE, K ;
KILDEA, D .
LANCET, 1995, 346 (8980) :931-934
[66]   The neuronal sortilin-related receptor SORL1 is genetically associated with Alzheimer disease [J].
Rogaeva, Ekaterina ;
Meng, Yan ;
Lee, Joseph H. ;
Gu, Yongjun ;
Kawarai, Toshitaka ;
Zou, Fanggeng ;
Katayama, Taiichi ;
Baldwin, Clinton T. ;
Cheng, Rong ;
Hasegawa, Hiroshi ;
Chen, Fusheng ;
Shibata, Nobuto ;
Lunetta, Kathryn L. ;
Pardossi-Piquard, Raphaelle ;
Bohm, Christopher ;
Wakutani, Yosuke ;
Cupples, L. Adrienne ;
Cuenco, Karen T. ;
Green, Robert C. ;
Pinessi, Lorenzo ;
Rainero, Innocenzo ;
Sorbi, Sandro ;
Bruni, Amalia ;
Duara, Ranjan ;
Friedland, Robert P. ;
Inzelberg, Rivka ;
Hampe, Wolfgang ;
Bujo, Hideaki ;
Song, You-Qiang ;
Andersen, Olav M. ;
Willnow, Thomas E. ;
Graff-Radford, Neill ;
Petersen, Ronald C. ;
Dickson, Dennis ;
Der, Sandy D. ;
Fraser, Paul E. ;
Schmitt-Ulms, Gerold ;
Younkin, Steven ;
Mayeux, Richard ;
Farrer, Lindsay A. ;
St George-Hyslop, Peter .
NATURE GENETICS, 2007, 39 (02) :168-177
[67]   APP locus duplication causes autosomal dominant early-onset Alzheimer disease with cerebral amyloid angiopathy [J].
Rovelet-Lecrux, A ;
Hannequin, D ;
Raux, G ;
Le Meur, N ;
Laquerrière, A ;
Vital, A ;
Dumanchin, C ;
Feuillette, S ;
Brice, A ;
Vercelletto, M ;
Dubas, F ;
Frebourg, T ;
Campion, D .
NATURE GENETICS, 2006, 38 (01) :24-26
[68]   The Swedish centenarian study: A multidisciplinary study of five consecutive cohorts at the age of 100 [J].
Samuelsson, SM ;
Alfredson, BB ;
Hagberg, B ;
Samuelsson, G ;
Nordbeck, B ;
Brun, A ;
Gustafson, L ;
Risberg, J .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGING & HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, 1997, 45 (03) :223-253
[69]   Enhanced accumulation of tau in doubly transgenic mice expressing mutant βAPP and presenilin-1 [J].
Samura, Eriko ;
Shoji, Mikio ;
Kawarabayashi, Takeshi ;
Sasaki, Atsushi ;
Matsubara, Etsuro ;
Murakami, Tetsuro ;
Xu Wuhua ;
Tamura, Shuta ;
Ikeda, Masaki ;
Ishiguro, Koich ;
Saido, Takaomi C. ;
Westaway, Dauid ;
St George Hyslop, Peter ;
Harigaya, Yasuo ;
Abe, Koji .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 1094 :192-199
[70]   Secreted amyloid beta-protein similar to that in the senile plaques of Alzheimer's disease is increased in vivo by the presenilin 1 and 2 and APP mutations linked to familial Alzheimer's disease [J].
Scheuner, D ;
Eckman, C ;
Jensen, M ;
Song, X ;
Citron, M ;
Suzuki, N ;
Bird, TD ;
Hardy, J ;
Hutton, M ;
Kukull, W ;
Larson, E ;
LevyLahad, E ;
Viitanen, M ;
Peskind, E ;
Poorkaj, P ;
Schellenberg, G ;
Tanzi, R ;
Wasco, W ;
Lannfelt, L ;
Selkoe, D ;
Younkin, S .
NATURE MEDICINE, 1996, 2 (08) :864-870