Holth Jerrah, Patel Tirth, Holtzman David M
Department of Neurology, Hope Center for Neurological Disorders, and the Knight Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Washington University, 660 S. Euclid Ave, Box 8111, St. Louis, MO 63108.
Neurobiol Sleep Circadian Rhythms. 2017 Jan;2:4-14. doi: 10.1016/j.nbscr.2016.08.002. Epub 2016 Aug 10.
Sleep disorders are prevalent in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and a major cause of institutionalization. Like AD pathology, sleep abnormalities can appear years before cognitive decline and may be predictive of dementia. A bidirectional relationship between sleep and amyloid β (Aβ) has been well established with disturbed sleep and increased wakefulness leading to increased Aβ production and decreased Aβ clearance; whereas Aβ deposition is associated with increased wakefulness and sleep disturbances. Aβ fluctuates with the sleep wake cycle and is higher during wakefulness and lower during sleep. This fluctuation is lost with Aβ deposition, likely due to its sequestration into amyloid plaques. As such, Aβ is believed to play a significant role in the development of sleep disturbances in the preclinical and clinical phase of AD. In addition to Aβ, the influence of tau AD pathology is likely important to the sleep disturbances observed in AD. Abnormal tau is the earliest observable AD-like pathology in the brain with abnormal tau phosphorylation in many sleep regulating regions such as the locus coeruleus, dorsal raphe, tuberomammillary nucleus, parabrachial nucleus, and basal forebrain prior to the appearance of amyloid or cortical tau pathology. Furthermore, human tau mouse models exhibit AD-like sleep disturbances and sleep changes are very common in other tauopathies including frontotemporal dementia and progressive supranuclear palsy. Together these observations suggest that tau pathology can induce sleep disturbances and may play a large role in the sleep disruption seen in AD. To elucidate the relationship between sleep and AD it will be necessary to not only understand the role of amyloid but also tau and how these two pathologies, together with comorbid pathology such as alpha-synuclein, interact and affect sleep regulation in the brain.
睡眠障碍在阿尔茨海默病(AD)中很常见,是患者入住养老院的一个主要原因。与AD病理一样,睡眠异常可能在认知能力下降前数年就出现,并且可能是痴呆症的预测指标。睡眠与淀粉样蛋白β(Aβ)之间的双向关系已经得到充分证实,睡眠紊乱和清醒时间增加会导致Aβ生成增加和Aβ清除减少;而Aβ沉积与清醒时间增加和睡眠紊乱有关。Aβ随睡眠-清醒周期波动,清醒时水平较高,睡眠时水平较低。随着Aβ沉积,这种波动消失,可能是因为它被隔离到淀粉样斑块中。因此,Aβ被认为在AD临床前期和临床阶段睡眠障碍的发生中起重要作用。除了Aβ,tau蛋白AD病理对AD中观察到的睡眠障碍可能也很重要。异常的tau蛋白是大脑中最早可观察到的类似AD的病理变化,在淀粉样蛋白或皮质tau蛋白病理出现之前,许多睡眠调节区域如蓝斑、中缝背核、结节乳头体核、臂旁核和基底前脑就出现了异常的tau蛋白磷酸化。此外,人类tau蛋白小鼠模型表现出类似AD的睡眠障碍,睡眠变化在包括额颞叶痴呆和进行性核上性麻痹在内的其他tau蛋白病中也非常常见。这些观察结果共同表明,tau蛋白病理可诱发睡眠障碍,可能在AD所见的睡眠中断中起很大作用。为了阐明睡眠与AD之间的关系,不仅有必要了解淀粉样蛋白的作用,还需要了解tau蛋白的作用,以及这两种病理变化与α-突触核蛋白等合并病理如何相互作用并影响大脑中的睡眠调节。