» Articles » PMID: 24378989

Alzheimer's Disease and CADASIL Are Heritable, Adult-onset Dementias That Both Involve Damaged Small Blood Vessels

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialty Biology
Date 2014 Jan 1
PMID 24378989
Citations 10
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This essay explores an alternative pathway to Alzheimer's dementia that focuses on damage to small blood vessels rather than late-stage toxic amyloid deposits as the primary pathogenic mechanism that leads to irreversible dementia. While the end-stage pathology of AD is well known, the pathogenic processes that lead to disease are often assumed to be due to toxic amyloid peptides that act on neurons, leading to neuronal dysfunction and eventually neuronal cell death. Speculations as to what initiates the pathogenic cascade have included toxic abeta peptide aggregates, oxidative damage, and inflammation, but none explain why neurons die. Recent high-resolution NMR studies of living patients show that lesions in white matter regions of the brain precede the appearance of amyloid deposits and are correlated with damaged small blood vessels. To appreciate the pathogenic potential of damaged small blood vessels in the brain, it is useful to consider the clinical course and the pathogenesis of CADASIL, a heritable arteriopathy that leads to damaged small blood vessels and irreversible dementia. CADASIL is strikingly similar to early onset AD in that it is caused by germ line mutations in NOTCH 3 that generate toxic protein aggregates similar to those attributed to mutant forms of the amyloid precursor protein and presenilin genes. Since NOTCH 3 mutants clearly damage small blood vessels of white matter regions of the brain that lead to dementia, we speculate that both forms of dementia may have a similar pathogenesis, which is to cause ischemic damage by blocking blood flow or by impeding the removal of toxic protein aggregates by retrograde vascular clearance mechanisms.

Citing Articles

Metabolic Syndrome: A Narrative Review from the Oxidative Stress to the Management of Related Diseases.

Martemucci G, Fracchiolla G, Muraglia M, Tardugno R, Dibenedetto R, DAlessandro A Antioxidants (Basel). 2023; 12(12).

PMID: 38136211 PMC: 10740837. DOI: 10.3390/antiox12122091.


The role of NOTCH3 variants in Alzheimer's disease and subcortical vascular dementia in the Chinese population.

Guo L, Jiao B, Liao X, Xiao X, Zhang W, Yuan Z CNS Neurosci Ther. 2021; 27(8):930-940.

PMID: 33942994 PMC: 8265940. DOI: 10.1111/cns.13647.


Bypassing TBI: Metabolic Surgery and the Link between Obesity and Traumatic Brain Injury-a Review.

McGlennon T, Buchwald J, Pories W, Yu F, Roberts A, Ahnfeldt E Obes Surg. 2020; 30(12):4704-4714.

PMID: 33125676 DOI: 10.1007/s11695-020-05065-3.


Potential Applications of Remote Limb Ischemic Conditioning for Chronic Cerebral Circulation Insufficiency.

You J, Feng L, Bao L, Xin M, Ma D, Feng J Front Neurol. 2019; 10:467.

PMID: 31130914 PMC: 6509171. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00467.


Metabolic Syndrome and Neuroprotection.

Etchegoyen M, Nobile M, Baez F, Posesorski B, Gonzalez J, Lago N Front Neurosci. 2018; 12:196.

PMID: 29731703 PMC: 5919958. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00196.


References
1.
Yamamoto Y, Craggs L, Watanabe A, Booth T, Attems J, Low R . Brain microvascular accumulation and distribution of the NOTCH3 ectodomain and granular osmiophilic material in CADASIL. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2013; 72(5):416-31. DOI: 10.1097/NEN.0b013e31829020b5. View

2.
Park L, Zhou P, Koizumi K, El Jamal S, Previti M, Van Nostrand W . Brain and circulating levels of Aβ1-40 differentially contribute to vasomotor dysfunction in the mouse brain. Stroke. 2012; 44(1):198-204. PMC: 3530010. DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.112.670976. View

3.
Cortes-Canteli M, Zamolodchikov D, Ahn H, Strickland S, Norris E . Fibrinogen and altered hemostasis in Alzheimer's disease. J Alzheimers Dis. 2012; 32(3):599-608. PMC: 3683985. DOI: 10.3233/JAD-2012-120820. View

4.
Sagare A, Bell R, Zlokovic B . Neurovascular dysfunction and faulty amyloid β-peptide clearance in Alzheimer disease. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med. 2012; 2(10). PMC: 3475405. DOI: 10.1101/cshperspect.a011452. View

5.
Moghekar A, Kraut M, Elkins W, Troncoso J, Zonderman A, Resnick S . Cerebral white matter disease is associated with Alzheimer pathology in a prospective cohort. Alzheimers Dement. 2012; 8(5 Suppl):S71-7. PMC: 3474974. DOI: 10.1016/j.jalz.2012.04.006. View