Tau、淀粉样β和α突触核蛋白病理学对路易体痴呆的贡献。

David J Irwin, Howard I Hurtig
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引用次数: 88

摘要

帕金森病(PD)和与路易体密切相关的痴呆症(DLB)是由于致病性α-突触核蛋白在脑细胞中的积累,表现为异质性运动和非运动症状,包括认知障碍和痴呆。大多数帕金森病患者在疾病晚期发展为痴呆症(PDD),尸检时α-突触核蛋白病理在新皮质分布广泛,而无痴呆症的帕金森病患者则不太常见。这三个实体PD、DLB和PDD组成了一个临床谱,统称为路易体障碍(LBD)。最近对LBD神经病理学基础的研究表明,虽然突触核蛋白病理学是这些疾病的决定性特征,但它通常伴有其他与年龄相关的神经退行性病变。特别是阿尔茨海默病(AD)的淀粉样斑块和tau缠结病理学特征(约50%的LBD患者在尸检时有足够的病理学可用于AD的继发性神经病理学诊断),似乎会导致LBD的认知障碍,并且该组合与运动症状的发作和痴呆症的发展之间的较短间隔以及较短的寿命相关。此外,在终末期疾病中发现的新皮质α-突触核蛋白、tau和淀粉样蛋白病理的共同出现表明,这些个体病理在人类生命中存在潜在的协同作用,反映了动物和细胞模型系统中的实验观察结果,这些实验观察结果表明,致病物种的突触核蛋白原纤维如何促进具有应变样特性的tau病和突触核蛋白病的跨突触传播。使用数字方法测量病理负荷的最新尸检研究强调,与支持这些模型数据的AD相比,LBD中tau病理密度相对较高的区域具有不同的新皮质模式。LBD中突触核蛋白、淀粉样蛋白和tau病理的脑脊液和分子成像生物标志物这一新兴领域有助于更好地理解不同病理如何进化和相互作用以产生LBD的临床异质性。未来阐明突触核蛋白病及其共同病理学的生物学意义临床亚组的工作必须专注于LBD的完整临床病理谱,并在可用的情况下使用经验证的生物标志物,在精确选择同质患者亚组的基础上设计临床试验,以最大限度地提高检测治疗影响的统计能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Contribution of Tau, Amyloid-Beta and Alpha-Synuclein Pathology to Dementia in Lewy Body Disorders.

The Contribution of Tau, Amyloid-Beta and Alpha-Synuclein Pathology to Dementia in Lewy Body Disorders.

The Contribution of Tau, Amyloid-Beta and Alpha-Synuclein Pathology to Dementia in Lewy Body Disorders.

Parkinson's Disease (PD) and the closely related Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) are due to the accumulation of pathogenic alpha-synuclein protein in brain cells manifest by heterogeneous motor and non-motor symptoms, including cognitive impairment and dementia. The majority of patients with Parkinson's Disease develop Dementia (PDD) in late stages of the disease and have widespread neocortical distribution of alpha-synuclein pathology at autopsy, compared with PD without dementia, in which neocortical synuclein pathology is less prevalent. These three entities PD, DLB and PDD comprise a clinical spectrum, collectively known as Lewy Body Disorders (LBD). Recent investigations into the neuropathological basis of LBD have demonstrated that while synuclein pathology is the defining feature of these disorders, it is often accompanied by other age-related neurodegenerative pathologies. In particular, amyloid plaque and tau tangle pathology characteristic of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) (~50% of all LBD patients have sufficient pathology at autopsy for a secondary neuropathologic diagnosis of AD), appear to contribute to cognitive impairment in LBD, and the combination is associated with a shorter interval between onset of motor symptoms and development of dementia and a shorter life span. Further, the co-occurrence of neocortical alpha-synuclein, tau and amyloid pathologies found at end-stage disease suggests a potential synergistic interaction of these individual pathologies in humans during life, mirroring experimental observations in animal and cell model systems that show how pathogenic species of synuclein fibrils can promote trans-synaptic spread of both tauopathy and synucleinopathy with strain-like properties. Newer post-mortem studies using digital methods to measure pathologic burden have highlighted distinct neocortical patterns of areas with relative higher density of tau pathology in LBD compared to AD that support these model data. The emerging field of cerebrospinal fluid and molecular imaging biomarkers of synuclein, amyloid and tau pathologies in LBD is contributing to a greater understanding of how the different pathologies evolve and interact to produce clinical heterogeneity in LBD. Future work to elucidate biologically meaningful clinical subgroups of synucleinopathy and its co-pathology must focus on the full clinicopathological spectrum of LBD and use validated biomarkers, when available, to design clinical trials based on the precise selection of homogeneous patient subgroups to maximize statistical power for detecting the impact of treatment.

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