| Literature DB >> 28633663 |
Hunter S Futch1,2,3, Cara L Croft1,2,3, Van Q Truong1,2,3, Eric G Krause4,3, Todd E Golde5,6,7.
Abstract
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is the most prevalent progressive neurodegenerative disease; to date, no AD therapy has proven effective in delaying or preventing the disease course. In the search for novel therapeutic targets in AD, it has been shown that increased chronic psychologic stress is associated with AD risk. Subsequently, biologic pathways underlying psychologic stress have been identified and shown to be able to exacerbate AD relevant pathologies. In this review, we summarize the literature relevant to the association between psychologic stress and AD, focusing on studies investigating the effects of stress paradigms on transgenic mouse models of Amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau pathologies. In recent years, a substantial amount of research has been done investigating a key stress-response mediator, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), and its interactions with AD relevant processes. We highlight attempts to target the CRH signaling pathway as a therapeutic intervention in these transgenic mouse models and discuss how targeting this pathway is a promising avenue for further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Chronic stress; Corticotropin-releasing hormone; Neurodegeneration; Psychologic distress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28633663 PMCID: PMC5479037 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-017-0190-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Relevant epidemiologic studies associating stress with increased risk of developing AD
| Epidemiologic studies | Description | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andel et al. (2012) [ | Prospective study. Occupation used as a surrogate for stress level | Correlation between markers of Job Stress (Low job control, High demands, Low social support, High job strain) in risk of developing any type of dementia (OR 1.06–1.23) or AD (OR 1.04–1.23) | Study used only occupation of participant as surrogate for stress but did not survey participants directly about their stress levels. |
| Kaup et al. (2016) [ | Prospective study. Elderly participants (Mean age 74) were assessed for depressive symptoms yearly for 5 years and then observed for an additional 11 years for onset of dementia | Patients found to have High and increasing symptoms were significantly more likely to develop any type of dementia (OR 1.94) | Clinical Dx of AD |
| Tsolaki et al. (2010) [ | Retrospective Case–control study of patients with dementia and without. | Found that 78% of those with dementia had a stressful life event prior to onset of dementia while only 55% of the control subjects encountered a stressful life event. AD (OR 2.24) | Clinical Dx of AD |
| Wilson et al. (2003) [ | Prospective study as part of the larger Religious Orders study of catholic nuns and priests, measuring stress proneness and incident AD. | Participants receiving the highest scores in the neuroticism scale used for a marker of stress proneness were twice as likely to develop AD within the 4.9 year average follow-up. | |
| Johansson et al. (2014) [ | Prospective study examining stress levels of women at three examinations over 35 years. | Hazard ratio for incident dementia were 1.1 (.71–1.71) reporting stress at 1/3 examinations, 1.73 (1.01–2.95) at 2/3 examinations, and 2.51 (1.33–4.77) at 3/3 examinations. | Clinical Dx of AD |
Fig. 1CRH-family expression and HPA axis. Adapted from [23, 67]
Fig. 2CRH-family peptides and receptor affinities [17]
Relevant stress biomarker studies in AD
| Biomarker studies | Description | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bernardi et al. (2000) [ | Serum levels of Cortisol and two neurosteroids, Allopregnanolone and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), were compared in AD patients and controls | AD patients had significantly higher levels of cortisol and lower levels of Allopregnanolone compared to age matched controls | Clinical Dx of AD |
| Popp et al. (2015) [ | Longitudinal prospective study examining serum and CSF levels of cortisol and Aβ in age matched controls, patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and AD patients. | CSF cortisol levels are elevated in subjects with AD and MCI. Elevated CSF cortisol levels were associated with faster cognitive decline in MCI of the AD type. | Clinical Dx of AD |
| Ennis et al. (2016) [ | Prospective trial measuring once yearly a 24 h urinary cortisol level, over an average interval of 10.56 years | Elevated urinary cortisol level was related with a 1.31 times increase in AD risk, predicting increased AD risk an average of 6 years before onset. | Clinical Dx of AD. Participants that went on to be grouped in the “Future AD” group were 10 years older on average than control group |
Studies involving stress paradigms and Aβ production
| Studies on Aβ | Model | Stress paradigm | Effect | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang et al. (2007) [ | Tg2576 [ | 3 months isolation | ↑ | |
| Dong et al. (2008) [ | Tg2576 | 6 months isolation | ↑ | |
| Lee et al. (2009) [ | Tg2576 | 2 h restraint daily for 16 days | ↑ | Measured ISF, soluble Aβ |
| Ray et al. (2011) [ | Wistar rat | 5 h restraint or bilateral UCN1 injection in amygdala | ↑ | |
| Huang et al. (2011) [ | APP/PS1 [ | 4 months isolation | ↑ | |
| Rothman et al. (2012) [ | 3xTg AD [ | Cage switched for 6 h/day for 2–3 days/week for 6 weeks | ↑ | |
| Dong et al. (2012) [ | Tg2576/ CRH overexpressing [ | CRH overexpressing transgenic | ↑ | |
| Rothman et al. (2013) [ | 3xTg AD | 6 h sleep restriction for 6 weeks | - | Aβ and tau measures trending upward but non-significant |
| Dong et al. (2014) [ | Tg2576 | One week or 10 months of isolation | ↑ | |
| Baglietto-Vargas et al. (2015) [ | 3xTg AD | 5 h of multimodal stress. Brief restraint, shaker plate with bright lights and noise | ↑ | |
| Park et al. (2015) [ | C57BL/6 J | 3 h restraint | ↑ | |
| Justice et al. | APP/PS1 | PTSD-like induction for two hours followed by a trigger | ↑ |
Studies in WT mice or rats observed levels of soluble Aβ42 and Aβ40 in brain homogenate, studies in transgenic mice included measurements of plaque load and insoluble Aβ unless noted otherwise
Studies involving stress paradigms and tau phosphorylation/aggregation
| Studies on Tau | Model | Stress paradigm | Effect | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rissman et al. (2007) [ | C57BL/6 J, multiple CRHR knockouts | Acute restraint at multiple time points up to two hours. Also done in adrenalectomized mice. | ↑ | |
| Carroll et al. (2011) [ | PS19 [ | Variable stressor once per day for 4 weeks, or restraint six hours/day and isolation for one month | ↑ | Variable stress paradigm not consistent in elevating tau measures |
| Rissman et al. (2012) [ | CRHR Knockouts | Half hour restraint one time or daily for 14 days | ↑ | |
| Filipcik et al. (2012) [ | C57BL/6 J | 30 min or 120 min restraint | ↑ | |
| Campbell et al. (2015) [ | CRH overexpressing | ↑ | ||
| Le et al. (2016) [ | Primary Neuronal Culture from C57BL/6 J | Treatment with CRH | ↑ |
Studies utilizing WT mice observed tau phosphorylation at various phospho-epitopes. Study utilizing PS19 mice quantified inclusions
Studies testing CRHR1 antagonists in mouse models and in vitro models relevant to AD
| CRHR1 antagonist | Studies | Dosage | Outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antalarmin | Rissman et al. (2012) [ | 20 mg/kg | Rissman (2012) - Able to block acute stress induced tau phosphorylation but not that induced by chronic stress [ | Dong (2014) measured PBS soluble Aβ, which represents roughly 5% of total Aβ. |
| A-helical CRH | Park et al. (2015) [ | 5 & 10 μM | Unable to block CRH induced Aβ increases in vitro. | |
| Astressin | Park et al. (2015) [ | 5 & 10 μM | Unable to block CRH induced Aβ increases in vitro. | |
| NBI 30775/R121919 | Rissman et al. (2012) [ | 20 mg/kg. Zhang (2016) utilized osmotic mini pump | Campbell (2015) [ | |
| NBI27914 | Park et al. (2015) [ | 10 mg/kg | Carroll (2011) [ |