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A Tau-Driven Adverse Outcome Pathway Blueprint Toward Memory Loss in Sporadic (Late-Onset) Alzheimer's Disease with Plausible Molecular Initiating Event Plug-Ins for Environmental Neurotoxicants

期刊

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
卷 81, 期 2, 页码 459-485

出版社

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-201418

关键词

Alzheimer's disease; cognitive dysfunction; environmental impact; memory loss; neurotoxicity; tauopathy

资金

  1. EU Interreg, Vlaanderen-Nederland
  2. ToxGenSolutions BV
  3. 3Rs Management and Consulting ApS

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The prevalence of sporadic Alzheimer's disease is increasing worldwide, with aging and genetics playing important roles but systemic and environmental factors also contributing. The Adverse Outcome Pathway concept has potential to enhance understanding and research in human disease.
The worldwide prevalence of sporadic (late-onset) Alzheimer's disease (sAD) is dramatically increasing. Aging and genetics are important risk factors, but systemic and environmental factors contribute to this risk in a still poorly understood way. Within the frame of BioMed21, the Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) concept for toxicology was recommended as a tool for enhancing human disease research and accelerating translation of data into human applications. Its potential to capture biological knowledge and to increase mechanistic understanding about human diseases has been substantiated since. In pursuit of the tau-cascade hypothesis, a tau-driven AOP blueprint toward the adverse outcome of memory loss is proposed. Sequences of key events and plausible key event relationships, triggered by the bidirectional relationship between brain cholesterol and glucose dysmetabolism, and contributing to memory loss are captured. To portray how environmental factors may contribute to sAD progression, information on chemicals and drugs, that experimentally or epidemiologically associate with the risk of AD and mechanistically link to sAD progression, are mapped on this AOP. The evidence suggests that chemicals may accelerate disease progression by plugging into sAD relevant processes. The proposed AOP is a simplified framework of key events and plausible key event relationships representing one specific aspect of sAD pathology, and an attempt to portray chemical interference. Other sAD-related AOPs (e.g., A beta-driven AOP) and a better understanding of the impact of aging and genetic polymorphism are needed to further expand our mechanistic understanding of early AD pathology and the potential impact of environmental and systemic risk factors.

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