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By Sachin Patil | January 19th 2009 07:16 AM | 10 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
The extracellular deposits of of the amyloid beta (Aβ) protein are the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease(AD) brain. These Aβ deposits are result of-

1) increased production of Aβ (anabolism)- High activity and levels of β-secretase (BACE1) and γ-secretase
(presenilins) increase the amyloidogenic processing of Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP), leading to the increased production of Aβ AND/OR

2) decreased clearance of Aβ (catabolism)- Low activity and levels of various Aβ-degrading enzymes such as Neprilysin (NEP), Insulin degrading enzyme (IDE), MMPs etc. and also of Aβ transporters on blood brain barrier e.g. low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1) causes increased deposition of Aβ in brain leading to plaque formation.

The question arises which of these pathways offer the best potential targets for the therapeutic intervention in AD.

Until now, the focus has been always on the former pathway, Aβ anabloism; there are number of pharmaceutical companies working on this and numerous molecules that inhibit BACE1 and γ-secretases are in clinical trials. However, various recently published reports point toward a beneficial, physiological role Aβ in memory. In this context, in vitro and in vivo studies have shown that increased Abeta production is a result of higher synaptic activity [1,2].

Moreover, in humans undergoing invasive monitoring for acute brain injury, Aβ levels in brain interstitial fluid were found to be strongly correlated with neurological status; Aβ levels decreased as patients declined and increased as they improved [3]. Thus, increased Aβ production may suggest a compensatory mechanism against neuronal damage associated with the disease. These data emphasize the beneficial role of Aβ, which is further supported by a very recent report that at physiological levels (picomolar levels) Aβenhances memory [4]. Thus, inhibition of Aβ production in itself may not offer any therapeutic benefits and may even worsen the disease.

Despite this, there is no question that Aβ aggregates found in AD brain are the culprits behind the AD-associated brain damage. Taken together, all these findings may suggest that the AD-associated damage is inflicted not because of the increased production of Aβ, but possibly by the decreased clearance of Aβ from the brain and hence forming the deleterious Aβ plaques in the brain. Thus, Aβ catabolism may offer novel, effective mechanisms to tackle AD. The upregulation of levels/ activities of NEP, IDE etc. by pharmacological and/or molecular biological means may offer the disease-modifying therapy that is urgently needed to tackle this devastating disease.

In the following post we will look at some significant progress done regarding the Aβ catabolic pathways!

References:

1) Kamenetz F, Tomita T, Hsieh H, Seabrook G, Borchelt D, Iwatsubo T, Sisodia S, Malinow R. APP processing and synaptic function. Neuron. 2003 Mar 27;37(6):925-37.

2) Cirrito JR, Yamada KA, Finn MB, Sloviter RS, Bales KR, May PC, Schoepp DD, Paul SM, Mennerick S, Holtzman DM. Synaptic activity regulates interstitial fluid amyloid-beta levels in vivo. Neuron. 2005 Dec 22;48(6):913-22.

3) Brody DL, Magnoni S, Schwetye KE, Spinner ML, Esparza TJ, Stocchetti N, Zipfel GJ, Holtzmann DM. Amyloid-beta Dynamics Correlate with Neurological Status in the Injured Human Brain. Science. 29 August 2008;321:1221-1224.

4) Daniela Puzzo, Lucia Privitera, Elena Leznik, Mauro Fà, Agnieszka Staniszewski, Agostino Palmeri, and Ottavio Arancio. Picomolar Amyloid-β Positively Modulates Synaptic Plasticity and Memory in Hippocampus. J. Neurosci. 2008 28: 14537-14545



Comments

Becky Jungbauer
Hi Sachin - welcome to Scientific Blogging! Alzheimer's has always been an interest of mine, and I've covered a number of AD drugs under FDA review. I assume by your posting that you are firmly in the Aβ school. What are your thoughts on tau's role in AD?

patilsac
Hi Becky,

Thank for you welcome!
I just started blogging from yesterday and based on these 2 posts it is possible for you to think that I am a Bapstist (beta-amyloid guy). But as I keep writing it will be clear that I am open to all pathways until we find an effective therapy against AD.  In fact, currently I am working  on a drug discovery/design project whereby our plan is to "design multiple ligands (DMLs)" i.e. a single drug that will act on multiple targets. We have shortlisted 12, most significant AD-associated molecular targets ranging from Abeta, tau to AChE, NMDA etc. I know it's a project with lofty goal, but the preliminary data are encouraging and we think we will be able to tackle many if not all of these targets with a single drug.

Coming back to your question, I think tau plays a very important role in Alzheimer's disease. It was evident from all the clinical trials data presented at this years AD conference in Chicago; Abeta-related drugs were not effective, but tau-related drug (Rember) showed very encouraging results.

In summary, I think a drug with multi-target activity would be highly suitable for Alzheimer’s disease given the complexity of
this disease with many targets and pathways. Various articles published in this
month’s “neurotherapeutics” issue emphasize the need for AD drugs with
multi-target functionalities.

Look forward to interesting discussions with you regarding AD!




jtwitten
Out of curiosity, do you have references for the AB-plaques causing AD, as opposed to simply being correlated with it?  This is way outside my area.  So, I'm not even sure what the alternative hypotheses are.  I frequently hear that the causative relationship is well established, but have never been given references, and I forget to ask. 

Becky Jungbauer
The problem, as I allude to in my post below, is that you can't definitively diagnose AD until autopsy. You can diagnose it clinically, of course, but absolute confirmation requires histopathology. That being said, the correlation is there and is definitely supported. Just like a particular cancer may have one or two or a handful of standard triggers, but arises from a variety of causes, so too are researchers discovering that AD may have a few main triggers (Abeta, tau, for example). But there are so many pathways to dementia that I don't think we'll ever be able to pinpoint only one. (I've even heard that AD is a "third" type of diabetes, after type 1 and type 2.)

patilsac
You are absolutely right. The disease is so complex with so many pathways involved, both developing the diagnostic test and treatment are very difficult, if not impossible. As you mentioned correctly, there are dyes being developed to stain Abeta deposits that will "correctly" detect AD. But, this is based on the premise that Abeta deposition equals to AD, which of course is not true as there are many healthy cases where we find Abeta deposits in the brain, but they don't develop AD. Therefore, I think we need to focus on other factors too in addition to just Abeta.

Recently, role of insulin is gaining attention in AD and it is being labeled as Type III Diabetes. But again this might be not exclusive and may be just a subset. Anyways, this jut further emphasizes how complex and challenging this disease is!

Becky Jungbauer
I recall the coverage of the AD conference in Chicago - tau seemed to be more en vogue, which is why I asked! From what I remember, NMDA and AChE were geared more toward addressing the symptoms. Pharma needs to start targeting the cause of the disease (which, understandably, is extremely difficult!). A recent advisory committee at FDA that I covered examined an imaging agent targeting Abeta, but the researchers and the speakers are rallying around the idea that we need to start developing agents to diagnose the disease BEFORE autopsy, which is currently the gold standard of diagnosis. I like the idea of DMLs - the disease itself is multifaceted and each person may respond to a variation in treatment. I'll check out the neurotherapeutics issue as you suggest.

I love your blog and
I need your help.
I have two blogs
dementia expert
Alzheimer's Activities Expert

Please visit them and encourage your friends to do the same.
Also if you want a way to reach more people, consider having your own blog there.
Just click on the red box that says "Get Paid to Blog" on the right hand side of either site
Keep in touch by leaving a comment at either blog
Thanks

patilsac
Thanks!
You have two nice blogs up there.
I will make sure to visit them regularly.

Pathology.org is awarding you as top resource and if you would like to get the banner, please email me back with the subject line as your URL to avoid Spam and also to make sure that you only get the banner.

patilsac
Thank you for your kind offer Kia!

-Sachin

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