| Literature DB >> 32829706 |
Hans C Hasselbalch1,2, Vibe Skov3, Lasse Kjær3, Torben L Sørensen4,5, Christina Ellervik4,6,7, Troels Wienecke4,8.
Abstract
Chronic inflammation and involvement of myeloid blood cells are associated with the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Chronic inflammation is a highly important driving force for the development and progression of the chronic myeloproliferative blood cancers (MPNs), which are characterized by repeated thrombotic episodes years before MPN-diagnosis, being elicited by elevated erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets. Mutations in blood cells, the JAK2V617F and TET2-mutations, contribute to the inflammatory and thrombogenic state. Herein, we discuss the MPNs as a human neuroinflammation model for AD development, taking into account the many shared cellular mechanisms for reduction in cerebral blood, including capillary stalling with plugging of blood cells in the cerebral microcirculation. The therapeutic consequences of an association between MPNs and AD are immense, including reduction in elevated cell counts by interferon-alpha2 or hydroxyurea and targeting the chronic inflammatory state by JAK1-2 inhibitors, e.g., ruxolitinib, in the future treatment of AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Blood cancer mutations; Capillary stalling; Cerebral hypoperfusion; Chronic inflammation; Dementia; Essential thrombocythemia; Hydroxyurea; Interferon-alpha2; Interferon-beta; JAK1/2-inhibitor; JAK2V617F; Myelofibrosis; Myeloproliferative neoplasms; Polycythemia vera; TET2; Thrombosis
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32829706 PMCID: PMC7444051 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-020-01877-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Similarities between MPNs, Alzheimer’s disease, type II DM, chronic inflammatory diseases, and smoking
| Clinical | MPNs | AD | Type II DM | Smoking | CI | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of CVE | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation is involved in disease pathogenesis in all five disease entities |
| Risk of CKD | Increased | ? | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation contributes in all five disease entities |
| Risk of PA | Increased | ? | Increased | Increased | Increased | PA is well described in smokers and in CI in MPNs, CI has recently been hypothesized to elicit and drive clonal evolution |
| Risk of VT | Increased | ? | Increased | Increased | Increased | CI significantly increases risk of thromboembolic diseases |
| Risk of MS and type II DM | Increased | ? | – | Increased | Increased | A recent study has found an association between MS and ET |
| Risk of AD | ? | – | Increased | Increased | ? | Epidemiological studies are ongoing to investigate, whether AD is more common among patients with MPNs. |
| Risk of COPD | Increased | – | Increased | Increased | Smokers and patients with CI and MPNs have an increased risk of developing COPD | |
| Risk of neuroinflammation | ? | – | Increased | Increased | Increased | Neuroinflammation is prone to develop in patients with MPNs due to a chronic inflammatory state with elevated cell counts, in vivo cell activation, and recurrent ischemic cerebral multi-infarctions with chronic cerebral hypoperfusion—one of the hallmarks of AD |
| Risk of cancer | Increased | ? | Increased | Increased | Increased | Smokers have an increased risk of cancer, in particular lung and bladder cancer; MPNs are associated with a 40% increased risk of second cancers. CI precedes several cancers |
| CI markers | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation is the common denominator for elevated inflammatory markers in all diseases and smoking as well |
| In vivo activation of leukocytes, platelets, and endothelium | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation is the common denominator for in vivo cell activation in all diseases and smoking as well |
| Markers of endothelial dysfunction | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation is considered to play a major role for endothelial dysfunction in all diseases and smoking as well |
| Markers of oxidative stress | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation with induction of increased oxidative stress is considered of major pathogenetic importance for organ dysfunction and organ failure in all disease entities |
| JAK-STAT/NF-kB, HIF, NF-E2 | Increased | Increased ? | Increased | Increased | Increased | The JAK-STAT, NF-kB, and HIF are activated in both smokers and in patients with MPNs, type II DM, and chronic inflammatory disease patients |
| Yes | Yes | ? | ? | ? | Elevated cell counts, in vivo cell activation with adherence of neutrophils to monocytes and platelets, and adherence of these cells to dysfunctional endothelium predispose to stalling of cerebral capillaries and cerebral hypoperfusion | |
MPNs myeloproliferative neoplasms, AD Alzheimer’s disease, DM diabetes mellitus, CVE cardiovascular events, CKD chronic kidney disease, PA peripheral atherosclerosis, VT venous thromboembolism, CI chronic inflammatory diseases, MS metabolic syndrome, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Fig. 1The myeloproliferative blood cancers—essential thrombocytosis (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), and myelofibrosis (MF)—(MPNs) evolve in a biological continuum, spanning 5-10-20 years from the early cancer stages (ET/PV) towards the advanced MF stage. Chronic inflammation is the driving force for this development giving rise to increasing oxidative stress and increasing genomic instability. Inflammatory cytokines drive clonal evolution, and the clone itself generates oxidative stress and inflammatory products which in a self-perpetuating vicious circle elicits more fuel to the fire. In the initial stages of MPNs (ET, PV, and hyperproliferative MF), blood cell counts are elevated (in PV always red blood cells but very often leukocytes and platelets as well, in ET always elevated platelet counts and in some patients elevated leukocyte counts as well and in MF elevated leukocyte and platelet counts). Neuroinflammation is associated with several chronic inflammatory diseases. It is argued that chronic systemic inflammation in MPNs may also elicit neuroinflammation in MPNs and contribute to the CNS-symptom burden in patients with MPNs. It is hypothesized that MPNs are “A Human Neuroinflammation Model” for Alzheimer’s disease development
Fig. 2Impact of early intervention with interferon-alpha2 (IFN) + JAK1/2 inhibitor ± statin upon the vicious self-perpetuating circle in MPNs. Early intervention with combination therapy is foreseen to prohibit disease progression by directly targeting the malignant clone (interferon) in concert with dampening of the inflammatory state (JAK1/2 inhibition, statin), which drives the malignant clone and also creates the soil for neuroinflammation and later development of Alzheimer’s disease. From this model, it is envisaged that treatment with IFN and JAK1/2 inhibitor may also be a highly important combination therapy for patients with early stage Alzheimer’s disease
Fig. 3The myeloproliferative blood cancers, MPNs, are associated with chronic inflammation and oxidative stress, which drive the malignant clone from the early cancer stages—ET and PV—towards the advanced burnt-out myelofibrosis stage with bone marrow failure. Smoking is a known risk factor for both MPN- and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) development. By triggering the NF-kB and JAK-STAT pathways, smoking elicits the production of several proinflammatory cytokines, including IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-alpha, which are released from leukocytes and platelets and also give rise to leukocyte-, platelet, and endothelial cell activation. A huge amount of amyloid beta is released from circulating activated platelets. Taking into account that the above pathways are activated in MPNs and AD as well, and the MPNs and AD share a similar inflammatory landscape, it is intriguing to consider, if leukocyte and platelet activation together with chronic inflammation and oxidative stress may constitute the common links, which are determinant for eliciting neuroinflammation, capillary stalling due to plugging of the microcirculation with activated blood cells and ultimately decreased cerebral blood flow and AD development
Fig. 4Mutations in blood cells give rise to chronic inflammation and elevated leukocyte and platelet counts, which together with endothelial cells are hyperactivated in MPNs. In polycythemia vera, red blood cell counts are elevated as well. Patients with MPNs and Alzheimer’s disease share several common pathways, which all together unite the different hypotheses of AD, the common denominators being chronic neuroinflammation and cerebral hypoperfusion, the latter being elicited by capillary stalling due to plugging of myeloid cells in the cerebral microcirculation