| Literature DB >> 28261376 |
Jeddidiah W D Griffin1, Patrick C Bradshaw1.
Abstract
There is a dire need to discover new targets for Alzheimer's disease (AD) drug development. Decreased neuronal glucose metabolism that occurs in AD brain could play a central role in disease progression. Little is known about the compensatory neuronal changes that occur to attempt to maintain energy homeostasis. In this review using the PubMed literature database, we summarize evidence that amino acid oxidation can temporarily compensate for the decreased glucose metabolism, but eventually altered amino acid and amino acid catabolite levels likely lead to toxicities contributing to AD progression. Because amino acids are involved in so many cellular metabolic and signaling pathways, the effects of altered amino acid metabolism in AD brain are far-reaching. Possible pathological results from changes in the levels of several important amino acids are discussed. Urea cycle function may be induced in endothelial cells of AD patient brains, possibly to remove excess ammonia produced from increased amino acid catabolism. Studying AD from a metabolic perspective provides new insights into AD pathogenesis and may lead to the discovery of dietary metabolite supplements that can partially compensate for alterations of enzymatic function to delay AD or alleviate some of the suffering caused by the disease.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28261376 PMCID: PMC5316456 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5472792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Free amino acid abundance changes in Alzheimer's disease.
| Amino acid | Tissue or fluid measured | Increase or decrease in AD | Points of interest | Effects of addition | DataWarrior Drug Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leucine | Strong mTOR activator [ | Metabolite led to mitochondrial dysfunction in rat neurons [ | 0.592 | ||
| Valine | Plasma [ | Decrease [ | mTOR activator [ | BCAA-fortified diet increased mean lifespan of male mice [ | 0.559 |
| Isoleucine | mTOR activator [ | BCAA-fortified diet increased mean lifespan of male mice [ | 0.684 | ||
| Phenylalanine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | Metabolized in the absence of tyrosine [ | 0.579 | |
| Tryptophan | Serum [ | Decrease [ | Metabolite causes metabolic dysfunction [ | Metabolite increases nitric oxide synthetase in cell culture [ | 0.661 |
| Tyrosine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | Decrease levels could disrupt catecholamine production | Improved memory and cognitive function in humans [ | 0.584 |
| Glutamine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | 0.573 | ||
| Aspartic acid | Brain [ | Decrease [ | 0.593 | ||
| Glutamic acid | Serum [ | Increase [ | Excitotoxicity leads to neuronal death [ | 0.531 | |
| Lysine | Brain [ | Decrease [ | 0.499 | ||
| Histidine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | 0.835 | ||
| Cysteine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | Involved in glutathione synthesis; mTOR inhibitor | Decreased mTOR activity in rats [ | 0.493 |
| Methionine | Serum [ | Decrease [ | mTOR activator | Increased amyloid-beta and p-tau in mice [ | 0.578 |
Structures were drawn using DataWarrior software using their most prevalent charge states at pH 7.4. A higher drug score value indicates a better drug candidate.
Figure 1Overview of the urea cycle. The ammonia that is produced by amino acid catabolism is converted into urea in the urea cycle for excretion. The metabolic intermediates in the figure are placed in boxes and the enzymes and other necessary substrates are present next to the arrows. The levels of several of these metabolic intermediates are altered in the brain and plasma of Alzheimer's disease patients.
Figure 2Select alterations affecting amino acid metabolism in Alzheimer's disease brain. (a) Several pathogenic processes occurring in Alzheimer's disease brain. The bold arrow indicates that tryptophan metabolism in the kynurenine pathway may be increased relative to the serotonin pathway in AD, contributing to the lower tryptophan levels observed. (b) Select mechanisms through which the Alzheimer's disease brain attempts to maintain homeostasis when faced with decreased glucose catabolism and increased amino acid catabolism and ammonia levels.