| Literature DB >> 25394409 |
Jian-Ming Li, Chao Liu, Xia Hu, Yan Cai, Chao Ma, Xue-Gang Luo, Xiao-Xin Yan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have revealed an inverse epidemiological correlation between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and cancer - patients with AD show a reduced risk of cancer, while cancer survivors are less likely to develop AD. These late discoveries in human subjects call for explorative studies to unlock the underlying biological mechanism, but also may shed new light on conceptual interrogation of the principal pathogenic players in AD etiology. DISCUSSION: Here we hypothesize that this negative correlation reflects a rebalance of biosynthetic propensity between body systems under the two disease statuses. In normal condition the body cellular systems are maintained homeostatically under a balanced cell degenerative vs. surviving/regenerative propensities, determined by biosynthetic resources for anabolic processing. AD pathogenesis involves neurodegeneration but also aberrant regenerative, or reactive anabolic, burden, while cancer development is driving by uncontrolled proliferation inherent with excessive anabolic activity. The aberrant neural regenerative propensity in AD pathogenesis and the uncontrolled cellular proliferative propensity in cancer pathogeneses can manifest as competitive processes, which could result in the inverse epidemiological correlation seen among the elderly.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25394409 PMCID: PMC4232711 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-014-0211-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1Schematic illustration of a hypothetic biological model for the inverse epidemiological association between Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and cancer in the elderly. In AD, degenerative as well as aberrant proliferative/regenerative responses are enhanced in the brain relative to normal aging. The former manifests as neuronal death and synaptic loss, which may be caused by neurotoxic molecules (e.g., Aβ and phosphorylated tau, inflammatory factors) overproduced in the brain. The later could be derived from maladapted regenerative changes including cell cycle reentry, glial proliferation and aberrant neuroplasticity, which can lead to the production of the above-mentioned neurotoxic products or may directly cause neuronal death. The vicious neuropathological cycle is maintained in the brain at the expense of body’s biosynthetic resources (energy and nutrients) for other cellular system, which can reduce the propensity for tumorogenesis because of a mutual competition (the balance point shifting to a pro-AD pathogenic trend). An opposite flow of the body’s biosynthetic resources occurs in the event of cancer development. The propensity of uncontrolled cancer cell replication deprives the body’s biosynthetic resources, including that for the anabolic activity driving the aberrant regenerative burden (the balance point shifting to pro-cancer pathogenic tendency). Consistent with the above biological mechanism, anti-cancer drugs may mitigate AD-type neuropathology, given that their anti-proliferative pharmacological efficacy would relieve the burden of aberrant neural regeneration, and thus slows down vicious pathogenic cycle.