Pharmacological Strategies to Improve Dendritic Spines in Alzheimer's Disease


Abstract:

To deeply understand late onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD), it may be necessary to change the concept that it is a disease exclusively driven by aging processes. The onset of LOAD could be associated with a previous peripheral stress at the level of the gut (changes in the gut microbiota), obesity (metabolic stress), and infections, among other systemic/environmental stressors. The onset of LOAD, then, may result from the generation of mild peripheral inflammatory processes involving cytokine production associated with peripheral stressors that in a second step enter the brain and spread out the process causing a neuroinflammatory brain disease. This hypothesis could explain the potential efficacy of Sodium Oligomannate (GV-971), a mixture of acidic linear oligosaccharides that have shown to remodel gut microbiota and slowdown LOAD. However, regardless of the origin of the disease, the end goal of LOAD-related preventative or disease modifying therapies is to preserve dendritic spines and synaptic plasticity that underlay and support healthy cognition. Here we discuss how systemic/environmental stressors impact pathways associated with the regulation of spine morphogenesis and synaptic maintenance, including insulin receptor and the brain derived neurotrophic factor signaling. Spine structure remodeling is a plausible mechanism to maintain synapses and provide cognitive resilience in LOAD patients. Importantly, we also propose a combination of drugs targeting such stressors that may be able to modify the course of LOAD by acting on preventing dendritic spines and synapsis loss.

Año de publicación:

2021

Keywords:

  • neuroinflammation
  • Type 2 Diabetes mellitus
  • late onset Alzheimer's disease
  • obesity
  • BDNF
  • dendritic spines

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Review

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Farmacología

Áreas temáticas:

  • Enfermedades
  • Farmacología y terapéutica
  • Fisiología humana