Cole Greg M, Frautschy Sally A
Greater Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center, California, USA.
Nutr Health. 2006;18(3):249-59. doi: 10.1177/026010600601800307.
Genetic data argues that Alzheimer's disease (AD) can be initiated by aggregates of a 42 amino acid beta amyloid peptide (Abeta42). The Abeta aggregates, notably small oligomer species, cause a cascade of events including oxidative damage, inflammation, synaptic toxicity and accumulation of intraneuronal inclusions; notably neurofibrillary tangles. Cognitive deficits are likely to begin with a failure of synaptogenesis and synaptic plasticity with dendritic spine loss and dying back of dendritic arbor. This is followed by neuron loss in key areas involved in learning and memory. Significant prevention or delay of clinical onset may be achievable by modifying environmental risk factors that impact the underlying pathogenic pathways. Because low fish intake and low blood levels of the marine lipid, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) have been associated with increased AD risk we have tested the impact of depleting or supplementing with dietary DHA on AD pathogenesis in transgenic mice bearing a mutant human gene known to cause AD in people. We reported that even with intervention late in life dietary DHA depletion dramatically enhanced oxidative damage and the loss of dendritic markers, while DHA supplementation markedly reduced Abeta42 accumulation and oxidative damage, corrected many synaptic deficits and improved cognitive function. Loss of brain DHA was exacerbated in mice expressing the mutant human AD transgene, this is consistent with evidence for increased oxidative attack on DHA oxidation in AD. Treatment with the curry spice extract curcumin, a polyphenolic antioxidant that inhibits AP aggregation, has been strongly protective in the same mouse model. Many Western diets are typically deficient in DHA and low in polyphenolic antioxidant intake. These and other data argue that increasing dietary intake of both DHA and polyphenolic antioxidants may be useful for AD prevention.
基因数据表明,阿尔茨海默病(AD)可能由42个氨基酸的β淀粉样肽(Aβ42)聚集体引发。Aβ聚集体,尤其是小的寡聚体物种,会引发一系列事件,包括氧化损伤、炎症、突触毒性和神经元内包涵体的积累;特别是神经原纤维缠结。认知缺陷可能始于突触发生和突触可塑性的失败,伴有树突棘丢失和树突分支的回缩。随后是参与学习和记忆的关键区域的神经元丢失。通过改变影响潜在致病途径的环境危险因素,可能实现对临床发病的显著预防或延迟。由于鱼类摄入量低以及海洋脂质二十二碳六烯酸(DHA)的血液水平低与AD风险增加有关,我们测试了饮食中DHA的消耗或补充对携带已知会导致人类AD的突变人类基因的转基因小鼠AD发病机制的影响。我们报告称,即使在生命后期进行干预,饮食中DHA的消耗也会显著增强氧化损伤和树突标记物的丢失,而补充DHA则显著减少Aβ42的积累和氧化损伤,纠正许多突触缺陷并改善认知功能。在表达突变人类AD转基因的小鼠中,脑DHA的丢失加剧,这与AD中DHA氧化受到更多氧化攻击的证据一致。用咖喱香料提取物姜黄素(一种抑制Aβ聚集的多酚类抗氧化剂)进行治疗,在同一小鼠模型中具有很强的保护作用。许多西方饮食通常缺乏DHA且多酚类抗氧化剂摄入量低。这些及其他数据表明,增加DHA和多酚类抗氧化剂的饮食摄入量可能对预防AD有用。