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Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis

The enormous, 2–3-million-year evolutionary expansion of hominin neocortices to the current enormity enabled humans to take over the planet. However, there appears to have been a glitch, and it occurred without a compensatory expansion of the entorhinal cortical (EC) gateway to the hippocampal memor...

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Autores principales: Whitfield, James F., Rennie, Kerry, Chakravarthy, Balu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10297544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371088
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12121618
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author Whitfield, James F.
Rennie, Kerry
Chakravarthy, Balu
author_facet Whitfield, James F.
Rennie, Kerry
Chakravarthy, Balu
author_sort Whitfield, James F.
collection PubMed
description The enormous, 2–3-million-year evolutionary expansion of hominin neocortices to the current enormity enabled humans to take over the planet. However, there appears to have been a glitch, and it occurred without a compensatory expansion of the entorhinal cortical (EC) gateway to the hippocampal memory-encoding system needed to manage the processing of the increasing volume of neocortical data converging on it. The resulting age-dependent connectopathic glitch was unnoticed by the early short-lived populations. It has now surfaced as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in today’s long-lived populations. With advancing age, processing of the converging neocortical data by the neurons of the relatively small lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC) inflicts persistent strain and high energy costs on these cells. This may result in their hyper-release of harmless Aβ(1–42) monomers into the interstitial fluid, where they seed the formation of toxic amyloid-β oligomers (AβOs) that initiate AD. At the core of connectopathic AD are the postsynaptic cellular prion protein (PrPC). Electrostatic binding of the negatively charged AβOs to the positively charged N-terminus of PrPC induces hyperphosphorylation of tau that destroys synapses. The spread of these accumulating AβOs from ground zero is supported by Aβ’s own production mediated by target cells’ Ca2+-sensing receptors (CaSRs). These data suggest that an early administration of a strongly positively charged, AβOs-interacting peptide or protein, plus an inhibitor of CaSR, might be an effective AD-arresting therapeutic combination.
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spelling pubmed-102975442023-06-28 Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis Whitfield, James F. Rennie, Kerry Chakravarthy, Balu Cells Review The enormous, 2–3-million-year evolutionary expansion of hominin neocortices to the current enormity enabled humans to take over the planet. However, there appears to have been a glitch, and it occurred without a compensatory expansion of the entorhinal cortical (EC) gateway to the hippocampal memory-encoding system needed to manage the processing of the increasing volume of neocortical data converging on it. The resulting age-dependent connectopathic glitch was unnoticed by the early short-lived populations. It has now surfaced as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in today’s long-lived populations. With advancing age, processing of the converging neocortical data by the neurons of the relatively small lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC) inflicts persistent strain and high energy costs on these cells. This may result in their hyper-release of harmless Aβ(1–42) monomers into the interstitial fluid, where they seed the formation of toxic amyloid-β oligomers (AβOs) that initiate AD. At the core of connectopathic AD are the postsynaptic cellular prion protein (PrPC). Electrostatic binding of the negatively charged AβOs to the positively charged N-terminus of PrPC induces hyperphosphorylation of tau that destroys synapses. The spread of these accumulating AβOs from ground zero is supported by Aβ’s own production mediated by target cells’ Ca2+-sensing receptors (CaSRs). These data suggest that an early administration of a strongly positively charged, AβOs-interacting peptide or protein, plus an inhibitor of CaSR, might be an effective AD-arresting therapeutic combination. MDPI 2023-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10297544/ /pubmed/37371088 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12121618 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Whitfield, James F.
Rennie, Kerry
Chakravarthy, Balu
Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title_full Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title_fullStr Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title_full_unstemmed Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title_short Alzheimer’s Disease and Its Possible Evolutionary Origin: Hypothesis
title_sort alzheimer’s disease and its possible evolutionary origin: hypothesis
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10297544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371088
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12121618
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