Neuroscience Research Group, University of Rosario Bogotá, Colombia.
Neurophysiology and Behavior Lab, Centro Regional de Investigaciones Biomédicas, School of Medicine of Ciudad Real, University of Castilla-La Mancha Ciudad Real, Spain.
Front Cell Neurosci. 2014 Jun 25;8:167. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2014.00167. eCollection 2014.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized by cognitive decline, brain atrophy due to neuronal and synapse loss, and formation of two pathological lesions: extracellular amyloid plaques, composed largely of amyloid-beta peptide (Aβ), and neurofibrillary tangles formed by intracellular aggregates of hyperphosphorylated tau protein. Lesions mainly accumulate in brain regions that modulate cognitive functions such as the hippocampus, septum or amygdala. These brain structures have dense reciprocal glutamatergic, cholinergic, and GABAergic connections and their relationships directly affect learning and memory processes, so they have been proposed as highly susceptible regions to suffer damage by Aβ during AD course. Last findings support the emerging concept that soluble Aβ peptides, inducing an initial stage of synaptic dysfunction which probably starts 20-30 years before the clinical onset of AD, can perturb the excitatory-inhibitory balance of neural circuitries. In turn, neurotransmission imbalance will result in altered network activity that might be responsible of cognitive deficits in AD. Therefore, Aβ interactions on neurotransmission systems in memory-related brain regions such as amygdaloid complex, medial septum or hippocampus are critical in cognitive functions and appear as a pivotal target for drug design to improve learning and dysfunctions that manifest with age. Since treatments based on glutamatergic and cholinergic pharmacology in AD have shown limited success, therapies combining modulators of different neurotransmission systems including recent findings regarding the GABAergic system, emerge as a more useful tool for the treatment, and overall prevention, of this dementia. In this review, focused on inhibitory systems, we will analyze pharmacological strategies to compensate neurotransmission imbalance that might be considered as potential therapeutic interventions in AD.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种进行性神经退行性疾病,其特征是认知能力下降、神经元和突触丧失导致的脑萎缩,以及两种病理损伤的形成:细胞外淀粉样斑块,主要由淀粉样β肽(Aβ)组成,和由细胞内过度磷酸化 tau 蛋白聚集形成的神经原纤维缠结。病变主要积累在调节认知功能的大脑区域,如海马体、隔核或杏仁核。这些大脑结构具有密集的谷氨酸能、胆碱能和 GABA 能的相互连接,它们的关系直接影响学习和记忆过程,因此它们被认为是 AD 过程中 Aβ 容易受损的高度敏感区域。最新的研究结果支持了这样一个新兴概念,即可溶性 Aβ 肽诱导突触功能障碍的初始阶段,可能在 AD 临床发病前 20-30 年开始,可能会扰乱神经回路的兴奋性-抑制性平衡。反过来,神经传递失衡将导致神经网络活动的改变,这可能是 AD 认知缺陷的原因。因此,Aβ 在与记忆相关的大脑区域(如杏仁核复合体、内侧隔核或海马体)的神经传递系统上的相互作用对于认知功能至关重要,并且似乎是设计药物改善学习和与年龄相关的功能障碍的关键靶点。由于基于 AD 中谷氨酸能和胆碱能药理学的治疗方法显示出有限的成功,因此结合不同神经传递系统调节剂的治疗方法,包括最近关于 GABA 能系统的发现,作为治疗和全面预防这种痴呆症的更有用的工具出现了。在这篇综述中,我们将重点关注抑制系统,分析补偿神经传递失衡的药理学策略,这些策略可能被认为是 AD 的潜在治疗干预措施。