Li Puma Domenica Donatella, Piacentini Roberto, Grassi Claudio
Department of Neuroscience, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy.
Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
Front Mol Neurosci. 2021 Jan 22;13:578211. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2020.578211. eCollection 2020.
Adult hippocampal neurogenesis is a physiological mechanism contributing to hippocampal memory formation. Several studies associated altered hippocampal neurogenesis with aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, whether amyloid-β protein (Aβ)/tau accumulation impairs adult hippocampal neurogenesis and, consequently, the hippocampal circuitry, involved in memory formation, or altered neurogenesis is an epiphenomenon of AD neuropathology contributing negligibly to the AD phenotype, is, especially in humans, still debated. The detrimental effects of Aβ/tau on synaptic function and neuronal viability have been clearly addressed both in and experimental models. Until some years ago, studies carried out on models investigating the action of Aβ/tau on proliferation and differentiation of hippocampal neural stem cells led to contrasting results, mainly due to discrepancies arising from different experimental conditions (e.g., different cellular/animal models, different Aβ and/or tau isoforms, concentrations, and/or aggregation profiles). To date, studies investigating adult hippocampal neurogenesis indicate severe impairment in most of transgenic AD mice; this impairment precedes by several months cognitive dysfunction. Using experimental tools, which only became available in the last few years, research in humans indicated that hippocampal neurogenesis is altered in cognitive declined individuals affected by either mild cognitive impairment or AD as well as in normal cognitive elderly with a significant inverse relationship between the number of newly formed neurons and cognitive impairment. However, despite that such information is available, the question whether impaired neurogenesis contributes to AD pathogenesis or is a mere consequence of Aβ/pTau accumulation is not definitively answered. Herein, we attempted to shed light on this complex and very intriguing topic by reviewing relevant literature on impairment of adult neurogenesis in mouse models of AD and in AD patients analyzing the temporal relationship between the occurrence of altered neurogenesis and the appearance of AD hallmarks and cognitive dysfunctions.
成体海马神经发生是一种有助于海马记忆形成的生理机制。多项研究将海马神经发生改变与衰老及阿尔茨海默病(AD)联系起来。然而,淀粉样β蛋白(Aβ)/tau蛋白积累是否会损害成体海马神经发生,进而损害参与记忆形成的海马神经回路,或者神经发生改变是否是AD神经病理学的一种附带现象,对AD表型的影响微不足道,尤其是在人类中,仍存在争议。Aβ/tau对突触功能和神经元活力的有害影响在体内和体外实验模型中均已得到明确证实。直到几年前,在研究Aβ/tau对海马神经干细胞增殖和分化作用的体内模型上所开展的研究得出了相互矛盾的结果,这主要是由于不同实验条件(例如,不同的细胞/动物模型、不同的Aβ和/或tau亚型、浓度和/或聚集情况)所产生的差异。迄今为止,对成体海马神经发生的研究表明,大多数转基因AD小鼠存在严重损伤;这种损伤在认知功能障碍出现前几个月就已存在。利用仅在过去几年才有的实验工具,对人类的研究表明,在受轻度认知障碍或AD影响的认知功能下降个体以及认知正常的老年人中,海马神经发生均发生了改变,新生成神经元数量与认知障碍之间存在显著的负相关。然而,尽管有这些信息,但神经发生受损是导致AD发病的原因还是仅仅是Aβ/pTau积累的结果这一问题仍未得到明确解答。在此,我们试图通过回顾AD小鼠模型和成体神经发生受损的AD患者的相关文献,分析神经发生改变的发生与AD特征及认知功能障碍出现之间的时间关系,来阐明这个复杂且非常有趣的话题。