4.6 Review

Mechanisms of Melatonin in Alleviating Alzheimer's Disease

Journal

CURRENT NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 1010-1031

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/1570159X15666170313123454

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; aging; amyloid-beta peptide; melatonin; secretases; neuroprotection

Funding

  1. Thailand Research Fund (TRF) [DPG5780001]
  2. Mahidol University Research Grant

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a chronic, progressive and prevalent neurodegenerative disease characterized by the loss of higher cognitive functions and an associated loss of memory. The thus far incurable stigma for AD prevails because of variations in the success rates of different treatment protocols in animal and human studies. Among the classical hypotheses explaining AD pathogenesis, the amyloid hypothesis is currently being targeted for drug development. The underlying concept is to prevent the formation of these neurotoxic peptides which play a central role in AD pathology and trigger a multispectral cascade of neurodegenerative processes post-aggregation. This could possibly be achieved by pharmacological inhibition of beta- or gamma-secretase or stimulating the non-amyloidogenic a-secretase. Melatonin the pineal hormone is a multifunctioning indoleamine. Production of this amphiphilic molecule diminishes with advancing age and this decrease runs parallel with the progression of AD which itself explains the potential benefits of melatonin in line of development and devastating consequences of the disease progression. Our recent studies have revealed a novel mechanism by which melatonin stimulates the nonamyloidogenic processing and inhibits the amyloidogenic processing of beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta APP) by stimulating alpha-secretases and consequently down regulating both beta-and gamma-secretases at the transcriptional level. In this review, we discuss and evaluate the neuroprotective functions of melatonin in AD pathogenesis, including its role in the classical hypotheses in cellular and animal models and clinical interventions in AD patients, and suggest that with early detection, melatonin treatment is qualified to be an anti-AD therapy.

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