Fleshing out the amyloid cascade hypothesis: the molecular biology of Alzheimer's disease
Author(s) -
Simon Lovestone
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
dialogues in clinical neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.11
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1958-5969
pISSN - 1294-8322
DOI - 10.31887/dcns.2000.2.2/slovestone
Subject(s) - tangle , dementia , amyloid (mycology) , alzheimer's disease , neuroscience , biochemistry of alzheimer's disease , disease , tau protein , amyloid β , neurofibrillary tangle , amyloid precursor protein , biology , medicine , pathology , senile plaques , mathematics , pure mathematics
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a disorder of two pathologies- plaques and tangles. The former have as a key constituent amyloid protein and the latter the microtubule-associaied protein tau. Genetics has demonstrated that changes in either protein are sufficient to cause dementia. The amyloid cascade hypothesis proposes that plaque-related changes precede tangle-related changes and positions amyloid as central to the degeneration of AD. All the evidence suggests this is correct, including evidence that presenil ins alter the processing of the amyloid precursor protein and evidence that disrupting the normal properties of tau underlies the related froniotemporal dementias. The amyloid cascade hypothesis has provided the basis for nearly a decade of intensive basic science - the skeleton of that hypothesis can now be fleshed out, and confidence is growing that this will result in useful disease-modifying therapies in the future.
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