Casadesus Gemma, Garrett Matthew R, Webber Kate M, Hartzler Anthony W, Atwood Craig S, Perry George, Bowen Richard L, Smith Mark A
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
Drugs R D. 2006;7(3):187-93. doi: 10.2165/00126839-200607030-00004.
Estrogen and other sex hormones have received a great deal of attention for their speculative role in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but at present a direct connection between estrogen and the pathogenesis of AD remains elusive and somewhat contradictory. For example, on one hand there is a large body of evidence suggesting that estrogen is neuroprotective and improves cognition, and that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) at the onset of menopause reduces the risk of developing AD decades later. However, on the other hand, studies such as the Women's Health Initiative demonstrate that HRT initiated in elderly women increases the risk of dementia. While estrogen continues to be investigated, the disparity of findings involving HRT has led many researchers to examine other hormones of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis such as luteinising hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone. In this review, we propose that LH, rather than estrogen, is the paramount player in the pathogenesis of AD. Notably, both men and women experience a 3- to 4-fold increase in LH with aging, and LH receptors are found throughout the brain following a regional pattern remarkably similar to those neuron populations affected in AD. With respect to disease, serum LH level is increased in women with AD relative to non-diseased controls, and levels of LH in the brain are also elevated in AD. Mechanistically, we propose that elevated levels of LH may be a fundamental instigator responsible for the aberrant reactivation of the cell cycle that is seen in AD. Based on these aforementioned aspects, clinical trials underway with leuprolide acetate, a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist that ablates serum LH levels, hold great promise as a ready means of treatment in individuals afflicted with AD.
雌激素和其他性激素因其在阿尔茨海默病(AD)中可能发挥的作用而备受关注,但目前雌激素与AD发病机制之间的直接联系仍不明确且存在一定矛盾。例如,一方面,大量证据表明雌激素具有神经保护作用并能改善认知功能,且绝经初期的激素替代疗法(HRT)可降低数十年后患AD的风险。然而,另一方面,诸如妇女健康倡议等研究表明,老年女性开始使用HRT会增加患痴呆症的风险。虽然仍在对雌激素进行研究,但涉及HRT的研究结果存在差异,这使得许多研究人员开始研究下丘脑 - 垂体 - 性腺轴的其他激素,如黄体生成素(LH)和促卵泡激素。在本综述中,我们提出在AD发病机制中起关键作用的是LH而非雌激素。值得注意的是,随着年龄增长,男性和女性的LH水平都会增加3至4倍,并且在整个大脑中都能发现LH受体,其分布模式与AD中受影响的神经元群体非常相似。就疾病而言,与未患病的对照组相比,AD女性的血清LH水平升高,且AD患者大脑中的LH水平也升高。从机制上讲,我们认为LH水平升高可能是导致AD中细胞周期异常重新激活的根本诱因。基于上述这些方面,正在进行的使用醋酸亮丙瑞林(一种可消除血清LH水平的促性腺激素释放激素激动剂)的临床试验,有望成为治疗AD患者的有效手段。