脑胆固醇在阿尔茨海默病中的冲突作用:来自脑纤溶酶原系统的教训。

Maria Dolores Ledesma, Carlos G Dotti
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引用次数: 46

摘要

回顾性临床研究表明,长期接受胆固醇合成抑制剂(他汀类药物)治疗的个体患AD(阿尔茨海默病)的风险较低。此外,用高剂量辛伐他汀治疗豚鼠或在培养细胞中急剧降低胆固醇可减少β -淀粉样肽的产生。这些数据支持了高脑胆固醇是阿尔茨海默病中β积累的原因这一概念,为建议使用他汀类药物预防这种疾病提供了科学支持。然而,一些尚未解决的问题引发了人们对高胆固醇是否是罪魁祸首的怀疑。首先,没有证据表明较高的神经元胆固醇会增加β的产生。其次,没有证据表明阿尔茨海默病的神经元比对照神经元有更多的胆固醇。相反,AD患者大脑中参与胆固醇合成的蛋白seladin-1特异性下调,ApoE4(载脂蛋白E4) AD患者海马膜出现低膜胆固醇。这种影响也可以通过改变富含胆固醇的膜结构域(筏)和筏介导的功能来证明,例如减少了β -降解酶纤溶酶的产生。第三,许多导致神经变性的遗传缺陷是由于胆固醇代谢缺陷造成的。第四,在雌性小鼠中,大脑渗透最多的他汀类药物会导致神经变性和高淀粉样蛋白的产生。总之,这些证据使得他汀类药物作为脑胆固醇合成抑制剂是有益的这一说法难以接受。它们的有利作用似乎更有可能来自于大脑氧合的改善。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The conflicting role of brain cholesterol in Alzheimer's disease: lessons from the brain plasminogen system.

Retrospective clinical studies indicate that individuals chronically treated with cholesterol synthesis inhibitors, statins, are at lower risk of developing AD (Alzheimer's disease). Moreover, treatment of guinea pigs with high doses of simvastatin or drastic reduction of cholesterol in cultured cells decrease Abeta (beta-amyloid peptide) production. These data sustain the concept that high brain cholesterol is responsible for Abeta accumulation in AD, providing the scientific support for the proposed use of statins to prevent this disease. However, a number of unresolved issues raise doubts that high brain cholesterol is to blame. First, it has not been shown that higher neuronal cholesterol increases Abeta production. Secondly, it has not been demonstrated that neurons in AD have more cholesterol than control neurons. On the contrary, the brains of AD patients show a specific down-regulation of seladin-1, a protein involved in cholesterol synthesis, and low membrane cholesterol was observed in hippocampal membranes of ApoE4 (apolipoprotein E4) AD cases. This effect was also evidenced by altered cholesterol-rich membrane domains (rafts) and raft-mediated functions, such as diminished generation of the Abeta-degrading enzyme plasmin. Thirdly, numerous genetic defects that cause neurodegeneration are due to defective cholesterol metabolism. Fourthly, in female mice, the most brain-permeant statin induces neurodegeneration and high amyloid production. Altogether, this evidence makes it difficult to accept that statins are beneficial through acting as brain cholesterol-synthesis inhibitors. It appears more likely that their advantageous role arises from improved brain oxygenation.

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