| Literature DB >> 34542071 |
Herbert B Allen1,2,3.
Abstract
Utilizing the pathology and microbiology found in tissue from patients with documented Alzheimer's disease (AD), the pathogenesis of this fateful disorder has been made clear. Borrelia burgdorferi and Treponema denticola spirochetes enter the brain, mostly via neuronal pathways and the entorhinal circulation. These organisms easily pass through the blood-brain barrier and have an affinity for neural tissue. Once in the brain, the spirochetes make intra- and extracellular biofilms, and it is the biofilms that create the pathology. Specifically, it is the intracellular biofilms that are ultimately responsible for neurofibrillary tangles and dendritic disintegration. The extracellular biofilms are responsible for the inflammation that initially is generated by the first responder, Toll-like receptor 2. The hypothesis that arises from this work is two-pronged: one is related to prevention; the other to treatment. Regarding prevention, it is very likely possible that AD could be prevented by periodic administration of penicillin (PCN), which would kill the spirochetes before they made biofilms; this would prevent the disease and would not allow any of the above deleterious changes generated by the biofilms to occur. As regards treatment, it may be possible to slow or prevent further decline in early AD by administration of PCN together with a biofilm disperser. The disperser would disrupt the biofilm coating and enable the PCN to kill the spirochetes. This protocol could be administered in a trial with the control arm utilizing the current treatment. The progress of the treatment could be evaluated by one of the current blood tests that is semi-quantitative. The specific protocols are listed.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloid-β; Toll-like receptor 2; biofilm disperser; biofilms; hyperphosphorylated tau; penicillin; spirochetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34542071 PMCID: PMC8609710 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-210429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig. 1Brain tissue from GP (left) and AD (right); arrows show helical (coiled) nature of the spirochetes in each specimen. TP immunostain (L) and BB immunostain (R) 100X (from Miklossy et al. [14]).
Fig. 2Hippocampal specimen from AD demonstrating extracellular biofilms (senile plaques-black arrow), intracellular biofilms (red arrows), neurofibrillary tangles with biofilm (blue arrow). PAS stain 40X.
Fig. 3Neuron (L) containing intracellular biofilm (Congo red positive) with intact dendrites and Neuron (R) showing deformed, blunted dendrites. Arrows show uninvolved dendrites. Congo red 100X.
Fig. 4Tau protein when phosphorylated causes disruption of the neuronal dendrite (from ADEAR/Wikimedia Commons).
Fig. 5Senile plaque demonstrating biofilm (pink material red arrow) coated by Aβ. Intracellular Aβ noted in cells to the left of the plaque (white arrows). Combined PAS and Aβ immunostain 40X.