| Literature DB >> 28890893 |
Barry W Festoff1,2, Ravi K Sajja3, Luca Cucullo3.
Abstract
Current projections are that by 2050 the numbers of people aged 65 and older with Alzheimer's disease (AD) in the US may increase threefold while dementia is projected to double every 20 years reaching ~115 million by 2050. AD is clinically characterized by progressive dementia and neuropathologically by neuronal and synapse loss, accumulation of amyloid plaques, and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in specific brain regions. The preclinical or presymptomatic stage of AD-related brain changes may begin over 20 years before symptoms occur, making development of noninvasive biomarkers essential. Distinct from neuroimaging and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, plasma or serum biomarkers can be analyzed to assess (i) the presence/absence of AD, (ii) the risk of developing AD, (iii) the progression of AD, or (iv) AD response to treatment. No unifying theory fully explains the neurodegenerative brain lesions but neuroinflammation (a lethal stressor for healthy neurons) is universally present. Current consensus is that the earlier the diagnosis, the better the chance to develop treatments that influence disease progression. In this article we provide a detailed review and analysis of the role of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) as well as coagulation molecules in the onset and progression of these neurodegenerative disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28890893 PMCID: PMC5584365 DOI: 10.1155/2017/1549194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1TM as a multifunctional or “Do-All” receptor, after Esmon [13] in considering roles at nexus of coagulation and innate immune inflammation at the BBB.
Figure 2Schematic based on data, both ours and others, where proximate factors generated from external sources, including dietary, infections, and injury, act on brain microvascular ECs to cause a “breach” of the BBB/NVU. The proximate factors include molecules associated with innate immune activation (DAMPs and Aβ) while agents that can interdict these factors include sTM and sRAGE. The initial and subsequent episodes of the dysfunction can “fan the flames” of neuroinflammation within the brain with microglial (and astrocytic) activation at transcriptional levels resulting in mitochondrial dysfunction, tau hyperphosphorylation, and aggregation, synapse loss, and neuronal cell death.