Fulop Tamas, Tripathi Shreyansh, Rodrigues Serafim, Desroches Mathieu, Bunt Ton, Eiser Arnold, Bernier Francois, Beauregard Pascale B, Barron Annelise E, Khalil Abdelouahed, Plotka Adam, Hirokawa Katsuiku, Larbi Anis, Bocti Christian, Laurent Benoit, Frost Eric H, Witkowski Jacek M
Research Center on Aging, Geriatric Division, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada.
Cluster Innovation Centre, North Campus, University of Delhi, Delhi, 110007, India.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2021 May 4;17:1311-1339. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S264910. eCollection 2021.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia and aging is the most common risk factor for developing the disease. The etiology of AD is not known but AD may be considered as a clinical syndrome with multiple causal pathways contributing to it. The amyloid cascade hypothesis, claiming that excess production or reduced clearance of amyloid-beta (Aβ) and its aggregation into amyloid plaques, was accepted for a long time as the main cause of AD. However, many studies showed that Aβ is a frequent consequence of many challenges/pathologic processes occurring in the brain for decades. A key factor, sustained by experimental data, is that low-grade infection leading to production and deposition of Aβ, which has antimicrobial activity, precedes the development of clinically apparent AD. This infection is chronic, low grade, largely clinically silent for decades because of a nearly efficient antimicrobial immune response in the brain. A chronic inflammatory state is induced that results in neurodegeneration. Interventions that appear to prevent, retard or mitigate the development of AD also appear to modify the disease. In this review, we conceptualize further that the changes in the brain antimicrobial immune response during aging and especially in AD sufferers serve as a foundation that could lead to improved treatment strategies for preventing or decreasing the progression of AD in a disease-modifying treatment.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是最常见的痴呆形式,而衰老则是患该病最常见的风险因素。AD的病因尚不清楚,但AD可被视为一种由多种致病途径导致的临床综合征。淀粉样蛋白级联假说认为,β淀粉样蛋白(Aβ)产生过多或清除减少及其聚集成淀粉样斑块是AD的主要病因,长期以来该假说一直被人们所接受。然而,许多研究表明,Aβ是大脑中数十年来发生的许多挑战/病理过程的常见结果。实验数据支持的一个关键因素是,导致具有抗菌活性的Aβ产生和沉积的低度感染先于临床明显的AD出现。这种感染是慢性的、低度的,由于大脑中近乎有效的抗菌免疫反应,在几十年里基本上没有临床症状。由此诱导出一种慢性炎症状态,进而导致神经退行性变。那些似乎能预防、延缓或减轻AD发展的干预措施似乎也能改变这种疾病。在这篇综述中,我们进一步提出,衰老过程中尤其是AD患者大脑抗菌免疫反应的变化,可作为一种基础,从而在疾病修饰治疗中带来更好的预防或减缓AD进展的治疗策略。