Caloric intake and Alzheimer's disease. Experimental approaches and therapeutic implications.

Giulio Maria Pasinetti, Zhong Zhao, Weiping Qin, Lap Ho, Yemul Shrishailam, Donal Macgrogan, Wendy Ressmann, Nelson Humala, Xunxian Liu, Carmen Romero, Breton Stetka, Linghong Chen, Hanna Ksiezak-Reding, Jun Wang
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引用次数: 58

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a rapidly growing public health concern with potentially devastating effects. Presently, there are no known cures or effective preventive strategies. While genetic factors are relevant in early-onset cases, they appear to play less of a role in late-onset sporadic AD cases, the most common form of AD. Due to the fact that the disease typically strikes very late in life, delaying symptoms could be as good as a cure for many people. For example, it is now widely accepted that if the onset of the disease could be delayed by even 5 years, the incidence could be cut in half. Both clinical and epidemiological evidence suggests that modification of lifestyle factors such as nutrition may prove crucial to AD management given the mounting experimental evidence suggesting that brain cells are remarkably responsive to "what somebody is doing". Among other nongenetic factors influencing AD, recent studies strongly support the evidence that caloric intake may play a role in the relative risk for AD clinical dementia. Indeed, the effect of diet in AD has been an area of research that has produced promising results, at least experimentally. Most importantly, as mechanistic pathways are defined and their biochemical functions scrutinized, the evidence supporting a direct link between nutrition and AD neuropathology continues to grow. Our work, as well as that of others, has recently resulted in the development of experimental dietary regimens that might promote, attenuate or even reverse features of AD. Most remarkably, while we found that high caloric intake based on saturated fat promotes AD type Beta-amyloidosis, conversely we found that dietary restriction based on reduced carbohydrate intake is able to prevent it. This evidence is very exciting and is, in part, consistent with current epidemiological studies suggesting that obesity and diabetes are associated with a >4-fold increased risk of developing AD. The clarification of the mechanisms through which dietary restriction may beneficially influence AD neuropathology and the eventual discovery of future "mimetics" capable of anti-Beta-amyloidogenic activity will help in the development of "lifestyle therapeutic strategies" in AD and possibly other neurodegenerative disorders.

热量摄入和阿尔茨海默病实验方法和治疗意义。
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一个快速增长的公共卫生问题,具有潜在的破坏性影响。目前,还没有已知的治疗方法或有效的预防策略。虽然遗传因素与早发性阿尔茨海默病有关,但它们在迟发性散发性阿尔茨海默病(最常见的阿尔茨海默病)中似乎起的作用较小。由于这种疾病通常发生在生命的晚期,对许多人来说,延迟症状可能和治愈一样好。例如,现在人们普遍认为,如果这种疾病的发病可以推迟5年,发病率就可以减少一半。临床和流行病学证据都表明,改变生活方式因素(如营养)可能对阿尔茨海默病的治疗至关重要,因为越来越多的实验证据表明,脑细胞对“某人正在做的事情”有显著的反应。在影响阿尔茨海默病的其他非遗传因素中,最近的研究强烈支持热量摄入可能在阿尔茨海默病临床痴呆的相对风险中起作用的证据。事实上,饮食对阿尔茨海默病的影响一直是一个研究领域,至少在实验上已经产生了有希望的结果。最重要的是,随着机制途径的定义及其生化功能的仔细研究,支持营养与AD神经病理之间直接联系的证据不断增加。我们的工作,以及其他人的工作,最近导致了实验性饮食方案的发展,可能促进、减轻甚至逆转AD的特征。最值得注意的是,虽然我们发现基于饱和脂肪的高热量摄入会促进AD型β -淀粉样变性,相反,我们发现基于减少碳水化合物摄入的饮食限制能够预防它。这一证据非常令人兴奋,并且在一定程度上与目前的流行病学研究一致,即肥胖和糖尿病与AD发病风险增加4倍以上相关。阐明饮食限制可能对阿尔茨海默病神经病理产生有益影响的机制,并最终发现未来能够抗β -淀粉样蛋白生成活性的“模拟物”,将有助于阿尔茨海默病和其他神经退行性疾病的“生活方式治疗策略”的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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