| Literature DB >> 31156161 |
Nobuya Kitaguchi1, Harutsugu Tatebe2, Kazuyoshi Sakai1, Kazunori Kawaguchi1, Shinji Matsunaga3, Tomoko Kitajima3, Hiroshi Tomizawa4, Masao Kato5, Satoshi Sugiyama5, Nobuo Suzuki6, Masao Mizuno4, Hajime Takechi7, Shigeru Nakai1, Yoshiyuki Hiki1, Hiroko Kushimoto8, Midori Hasegawa5, Yukio Yuzawa5, Takahiko Tokuda9.
Abstract
The accumulation of amyloid-β protein (Aβ) and tau in the brain is a major pathological change related to Alzheimer's disease. We have continued to develop Extracorporeal Blood Aβ Removal Systems (E-BARS) as a method for enhancing Aβ clearance from the brain. Our previous report revealed that dialyzers effectively remove blood Aβ and evoke large Aβ influxes into the blood, resulting in a decrease in brain Aβ accumulation after initiating hemodialysis, and that patients who underwent hemodialysis had lower brain Aβ accumulation than those who did not. Here, plasma total tau concentrations from 30 patients undergoing hemodialysis were measured using an ultrasensitive immunoassay and compared to those from 11 age-matched controls. Plasma total tau concentrations were higher in patients with renal failure regardless of whether they underwent hemodialysis, suggesting the involvement of the kidneys in tau degradation and excretion. Hemodialyzers effectively removed blood Aβ but not extracorporeal blood tau. The influx of tau into the blood was observed at around the 1 h period during hemodialysis sessions. However, the influx amount of tau was far smaller than that of Aβ. Furthermore, histopathological analysis revealed similar, not significantly less, cerebral cortex phosphorylated tau accumulation between the 17 patients who underwent hemodialysis and the 16 age-matched subjects who did not, although both groups showed sparse accumulation. These findings suggest that hemodialysis may induce both tau and Aβ migration into the blood. However, as a therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer's disease, it may only be effective for removing Aβ from the brain.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid-β peptide; blood component removal; hemodialysis; tau proteinzzm321990
Year: 2019 PMID: 31156161 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-190087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472