| Literature DB >> 28974926 |
Filippo S Giorgi1, Larisa Ryskalin2, Riccardo Ruffoli2, Francesca Biagioni3, Fiona Limanaqi2, Michela Ferrucci2, Carla L Busceti3, Ubaldo Bonuccelli1, Francesco Fornai2,3.
Abstract
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) features the accumulation of β-amyloid and Tau aggregates, which deposit as extracellular plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), respectively. Neuronal Tau aggregates may appear early in life, in the absence of clinical symptoms. This occurs in the brainstem reticular formation and mostly within Locus Coeruleus (LC), which is consistently affected during AD. LC is the main source of forebrain norepinephrine (NE) and it modulates a variety of functions including sleep-waking cycle, alertness, synaptic plasticity, and memory. The iso-dendritic nature of LC neurons allows their axons to spread NE throughout the whole forebrain. Likewise, a prion-like hypothesis suggests that Tau aggregates may travel along LC axons to reach out cortical neurons. Despite this timing is compatible with cross-sectional studies, there is no actual evidence for a causal relationship between these events. In the present mini-review, we dedicate special emphasis to those various mechanisms that may link degeneration of LC neurons to the onset of AD pathology. This includes the hypothesis that a damage to LC neurons contributes to the onset of dementia due to a loss of neuroprotective effects or, even the chance that, LC degenerates independently from cortical pathology. At the same time, since LC neurons are lost in a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders we considered which molecular mechanism may render these brainstem neurons so vulnerable.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid; basal forebrain nuclei; mild cognitive impairment; neurofibrillary tangles; phospho-Tau; pre-clinical AD
Year: 2017 PMID: 28974926 PMCID: PMC5610679 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2017.00080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Staging of neurofibrillary tangles (NFT-related) pathology in Locus coeruleus (LC).
| Subcortical pretangles stages | a | P-Tau accumulation within the axon hillock of brainstem reticular neurons, mostly LC neurons. | |
| b | P-Tau accumulation extended further into LC cell bodies. | ||
| Pretangle Stages | c | Involvement of other reticular (or reticular-related) ascending nuclei (e.g., dorsal raphe nucleus, nuclei of the basal forebrain). | |
| Cortical pretangles stages | 1a | Pre-tangle material in LC axons within the trans-entorhinal and entorhinal regions. | |
| 1b | Pre-tangle inclusions within pyramidal cells of the trans-entorhinal region connected with NFT positive axons. |
Figure 1Molecular events occurring in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) following locus coeruleus (LC) norepinephrine (NE) loss and autophagy impairment. At LC pre-synaptic terminal. Decreased expression of β2-adrenergic receptors in the pre-synaptic terminal leads to autophagy suppression. Oxidative stress, NE decrease and IP3 all contribute to endoplasmic reticulum stress and impairment of proteins processing, folding and trafficking in the trans-Golgi network. Aβ oligomers seeds, deriving from an amyloidogenic cleavage of APP, as well as Tau protein, are engulfed into vesicles and released into the axo-somatic synaptic cleft. At post-synaptic cortical neuron. (1) Aβ and Tau seeds are spread into the synaptic cleft and internalized into the cell body of the cortical neuron. (2) The loss of β2-adrenergic receptors (β2R) stimulation decreases autophagy. Thus the lack of NE, cannot exert its protective effect in the cell, it drives a cascade of detrimental intracellular effects instead. (3,4) Ca2+ entry into the cell, increase of cAMP levels, activation of PKA and PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway lead to a further inhibition of autophagy. (A–G) PKA hyper-phosphorylates Tau protein (A) which leads to microtubules disgregation (B) and to the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). (C) These effects translate into mitochondrial damage (D), Golgi fragmentation due to the inactivation of associated binding proteins (E) and ER stress (F). These events disrupt the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR) which does not provide for a proper intracellular trafficking, processing and sorting of misfolded Aβ, leading to further increase of harmful oligomers into the cell (G). Misfolded proteins are internalized into the endosomal compartment but autophagy impairment does not allow their removal and fosters trans-synaptic propagations.