van Dijk Gertjan, van Heijningen Steffen, Reijne Aaffien C, Nyakas Csaba, van der Zee Eddy A, Eisel Ulrich L M
Department Behavioural Neuroscience, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen Groningen, Netherlands.
Department Behavioural Neuroscience, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen Groningen, Netherlands ; Systems Biology Centre for Energy Metabolism and Ageing, University Medical Center, University of Groningen Groningen, Netherlands.
Front Neurosci. 2015 May 18;9:173. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00173. eCollection 2015.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a complex, multifactorial disease with a number of leading mechanisms, including neuroinflammation, processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) to amyloid β peptide, tau protein hyperphosphorylation, relocalization, and deposition. These mechanisms are propagated by obesity, the metabolic syndrome and type-2 diabetes mellitus. Stress, sedentariness, dietary overconsumption of saturated fat and refined sugars, and circadian derangements/disturbed sleep contribute to obesity and related metabolic diseases, but also accelerate age-related damage and senescence that all feed the risk of developing AD too. The complex and interacting mechanisms are not yet completely understood and will require further analysis. Instead of investigating AD as a mono- or oligocausal disease we should address the disease by understanding the multiple underlying mechanisms and how these interact. Future research therefore might concentrate on integrating these by "systems biology" approaches, but also to regard them from an evolutionary medicine point of view. The current review addresses several of these interacting mechanisms in animal models and compares them with clinical data giving an overview about our current knowledge and puts them into an integrated framework.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种复杂的多因素疾病,有多种主要发病机制,包括神经炎症、淀粉样前体蛋白(APP)加工成β淀粉样肽、tau蛋白过度磷酸化、重新定位和沉积。肥胖、代谢综合征和2型糖尿病会促使这些机制发展。压力、久坐不动、饮食中饱和脂肪和精制糖摄入过多,以及昼夜节律紊乱/睡眠障碍不仅会导致肥胖和相关代谢疾病,还会加速与年龄相关的损伤和衰老,进而增加患AD的风险。这些复杂且相互作用的机制尚未完全明确,仍需进一步分析。我们不应将AD视为单因素或少数因素导致的疾病,而应通过了解多种潜在机制及其相互作用来应对该疾病。因此,未来的研究可能会集中于通过“系统生物学”方法整合这些机制,同时也从进化医学的角度进行考量。本综述探讨了动物模型中的几种相互作用机制,并将其与临床数据进行比较,概述了我们目前的认知,并将这些机制置于一个综合框架中。