| Literature DB >> 26793049 |
Daniel M Johnstone1, Cécile Moro2, Jonathan Stone1, Alim-Louis Benabid2, John Mitrofanis2.
Abstract
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease are the two most common neurodegenerative disorders. They develop after a progressive death of many neurons in the brain. Although therapies are available to treat the signs and symptoms of both diseases, the progression of neuronal death remains relentless, and it has proved difficult to slow or stop. Hence, there is a need to develop neuroprotective or disease-modifying treatments that stabilize this degeneration. Red to infrared light therapy (λ = 600-1070 nm), and in particular light in the near infrared (NIr) range, is emerging as a safe and effective therapy that is capable of arresting neuronal death. Previous studies have used NIr to treat tissue stressed by hypoxia, toxic insult, genetic mutation and mitochondrial dysfunction with much success. Here we propose NIr therapy as a neuroprotective or disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's patients.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid plaques; disease-modifying; neuroprotection; photobiomodulation; tau protein
Year: 2016 PMID: 26793049 PMCID: PMC4707222 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1The major brain sites of pathology in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's patients. For Alzheimer's disease, green shade indicates major regions of cell loss and β-amyloid plaques and tau pathology, while in Parkinson's disease, red shade indicates sites of major cell loss and α-synuclein pathology.
Studies reporting on NIr treatment in Alzheimer's disease.
| ↑ Cell survival | Sommer et al., | Human cells | |
| ↑ ATP content | |||
| ↓β-amyloid aggregates | |||
| ↓β-amyloid plaques | Purushothuman et al., | APP/PS1, K3691 transgenics (chronic) | Mouse |
| ↓ Oxidative stress | |||
| ↓ hyperphosphorylated tau | |||
| ↓β-amyloid plaques | DeTaboada et al., | APP transgenic (chronic) | Mouse |
| ↓ Inflammation | |||
| ↑ ATP content | |||
| ↑ Mitochondrial function | |||
| ↓β-amyloid plaques | Grillo et al., | TASTPM transgenic (chronic) | Mouse |
| ↓ Oxidative stress | |||
| ↓ Hyperphosphorylated tau | |||
| ↑ Heat shock proteins | |||
| ↑ Cognitive behavioral deficits | Michalikova et al., | CD1 transgenic (acute) | Mouse |
| DeTaboada et al., | APP transgenic (chronic) |
Studies reporting on NIr treatment in Parkinson's disease.
| ↑ Cell survival (striatal and cortical cells) | Liang et al., | Rat cells | |
| ↑ ATP content | |||
| ↓ Oxidative stress | |||
| ↑ Mitochondrial function | Quirk et al., | Human cells | |
| ↓ Oxidative stress | |||
| ↑ mitochondrial movement | Trimmer et al., | Human cells | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Shaw et al., | MPTP (acute) | Mouse |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Peoples et al., | MPTP (chronic) | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Purushothuman et al., | K369I transgenic (chronic) | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Moro et al., | MPTP (acute) | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | El Massri et al., | MPTP (acute, sub-chronic) | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Reinhart et al., | MPTP (acute) | |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ cells) | Reinhart et al., | 6OHDA hemi-parkinsonian | Rat |
| ↑ Cell survival (TH+ and Nissl-stained cells) | Darlot et al., | MPTP (sub-acute) | Monkey |
| ↓ Oxidative stress | Purushothuman et al., | K369I transgenic (chronic) | Mouse |
| ↓ Hyperphosphorylated tau | |||
| ↑ Flight | Vos et al., | pink1 mutant | Flies |
| ↑ Complex IV-dependent respiration | |||
| ↓ Mutant mitochondria defects | |||
| ↓ Abnormal basal ganglia activity (Fos immunoreactivity) | Shaw et al., | MPTP (acute) | Mouse |
| ↑ Locomotive behavior | Whelan et al., | MPTP (acute) | Mouse |
| Desmet et al., | MPTP (acute) | ||
| Quirk et al., | A53T(<-synuclein transgenic) | ||
| Moro et al., | MPTP (acute) | ||
| ↓ Apomorphine-induced rotations | Reinhart et al., | 6OHDA hemi-parkinsonian | Rat |
| ↑ Locomotive behavior, clinical signs | Darlot et al., | MPTP (sub-acute) | Monkey |
| ↓ Clinical signs | Zhao et al., | Parkinson's patients | Human |
| Quietmind Foundation trial ( |
Figure 2The putative NIr protective mechanisms in the brain. (A) Direct NIr stimulation of the mitochondria of the damaged neurons or endothelial cells. This stimulation would repair the damage leading to neuronal protection. NIr may also stimulate neurogenesis in the hippocampus and/or synaptogenesis in the damaged neurons (B) indirect (remote) stimulation via circulating immune cells and/or bone marrow stem cells leading to neuronal protection. The latter is similar to the so-called “abscopal” effect in the treatment of cancer metastasis. We suggest that the primary mechanism is the direct effect, of neurons and/or of endothelial cells, while the systemic indirect effect forms a secondary supportive mechanism.
Figure 3Potential NIr applications in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's patients. For effective neuroprotection, NIr could be applied extracranially in Alzheimer's disease (e.g., in the form of a helmet) and intracranially in Parkinson's disease (e.g., in the form of an optical fiber linked to a LED or laser source). NIr would be delivered very close to the diseased cells in the neocortex (for Alzheimer's) and brainstem SNc (for Parkinson's). In Parkinson's patients selected for deep brain stimulation, the NIr optical fiber could be implanted surgically at the same time, for neuroprotection of remaining dopaminergic cells (see text for details).