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Annotation


Oddo S, Caccamo A, Green KN, Liang K, Tran L, Chen Y, Leslie FM, Laferla FM. Chronic nicotine administration exacerbates tau pathology in a transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Feb 22;102(8):3046-51. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: We Are What We Consume? Foods, Drugs Affect Amyloid, AD

Comment by:  Gregory Cole, ARF Advisor
Submitted 14 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 14 October 2005

The identification of ACE as a possible AD gene and ACE inhibitors as potential risk factors for AD are both potentially very important observations. Similarly, the many reports on relatively nontoxic dietary factors modulating amyloidosis in animal models is reason to believe that we will be able to find ways to prevent AD. The fact that there are so many possible approaches should not jade people, or convince them that we can’t all be right.

It seems highly likely that Alzheimer’s, like most other late-onset diseases of aging, has multiple and usually weak genetic and environmental influences that modulate susceptibility. In contrast, diseases with strong single genetic or environmental risk factors will typically be more clearly causal, with earlier onset due to the potent genetic risk factors (e.g., autosomal dominant) or gross deficiencies of essential nutrients (scurvy, rickets, etc.). In this situation, common sense suggests a multifactorial approach to address these multiple risk factors for the prevention of late-onset AD. And common sense suggests that this is what...  Read more


  Primary News: We Are What We Consume? Foods, Drugs Affect Amyloid, AD

Comment by:  J. Lucy Boyd
Submitted 13 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 17 October 2005
  I recommend this paper

So much for ACE inhibitors being the "perfect pill" and protective as one ages. I find this upsetting, but clinically important information. I am hopeful that more data will be accumulated on this issue quickly.

View all comments by J. Lucy Boyd

  Primary News: We Are What We Consume? Foods, Drugs Affect Amyloid, AD

Comment by:  Mary Reid
Submitted 14 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 18 October 2005

I was very interested to see the Hemming and Selkoe study regarding the possibility that ACE inhibition may not be advisable in AD.

I refer to the recent ARF news article (1), which reports that Wolozin and colleagues find that the relative risk for AD in the CABG group was 1.7-fold that of the PTCA group.

It's interesting that Pell et al. (2) report that 22 percent of CABG patients were on angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, compared with 15 percent of PTCA patients.

References:
1. ARF related news story.

2. Pell JP, Walsh D, Norrie J, Berg G, Colquhoun AD, Davidson K, Eteiba H, Faichney A, Flapan A, Hogg KJ, Jeffrey RR, Jennings K, McArthur J, Mankad P, Oldroyd K, Pell AC, Starkey IR. Outcomes following coronary artery bypass grafting and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty in the stent era: a prospective study of all 9890 consecutive patients operated on in Scotland over a two year period. Heart. 2001 Jun;85(6):662-6. Abstract

View all comments by Mary Reid


  Primary News: We Are What We Consume? Foods, Drugs Affect Amyloid, AD

Comment by:  Philippe Marambaud
Submitted 18 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 18 October 2005

It is difficult to know whether the anti-amyloid effect of the mentioned natural compounds (i.e., resveratrol or EGCG) observed in cell culture systems or even in mouse models may explain or support the beneficial effect of specific diets. This effect may represent only the tip of the iceberg. Indeed, wine contains more than 600 different components, including well-characterized antioxidant molecules. It is, therefore, difficult to narrow down the beneficial effect of wine or green tea intake to one specific compound. Furthermore, we cannot exclude the possibility that several compounds work in synergy to slow down the progression of the neurodegenerative process in human.

The oral bioavailability of resveratrol is almost null due to efficient metabolism by the kidney system (see Wenzel and Somoza, 2005). Therefore we do not believe that resveratrol could be used per se as an anti-amyloidogenic drug in vivo. Its potential biological activity in the brain after peripheral administration is, therefore, very questionable. However,...  Read more


  Primary News: We Are What We Consume? Foods, Drugs Affect Amyloid, AD

Comment by:  Peter Davies
Submitted 25 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 25 October 2005

Regarding the impact of certain foods, beverages, and drugs on the development of AD, I think it is likely a situation similar to that in cancer epidemiology: A healthy lifestyle lowers risk; a bad life style enhances risk. Of course, genetic factors provide a background which may determine how effective these changes in risk prove to be. It doesn't much matter what you eat or drink if you have an aggressive PS1 mutation; you'll get AD. And it may not matter too much, either, if you have an ApoE2 allele, since you are well protected (this is less certain, but makes the point). For the rest of the population, there is probably a sliding scale of risk. Nothing is absolutely protective or absolutely causal.

We need to try to think in terms of risk/benefit ratios. I take vitamin C and vitamin E every day, and have done so for years, as it seems reasonably clear that the risk/benefit ratio is in favor of these compounds. They may lower my risk of AD more than they raise my risk of cardiovascular disease. It's hard to come up with real numbers, or any degree of certainty, with the...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

The 3xTg-AD mice were derived by comicroinjecting two independent transgenes encoding human APPSwe and the human tauP301L (both under control of the mouse Thy1.2 regulatory element) into single-cell embryos harvested from homozygous mutant PS1M146V knockin (PS1-KI) mice.

The antibodies used were as follows: anti-Ab 6E10 (Signet Laboratories, Dedham, MA), anti-Ab 1560 (Chemicon), both raised against amino acids 1–17 of Ab, anti-Tau HT7 (raised against amino acids 159–163), AT8 (recognizes phosphorylated Ser-202 and Thr-205), AT180 (recognizes phosphorylated Ser-231) (Innogenetics, Ghent, Belgium), AT270 (recognizes phosphorylated Thr-181), anti-GSK3b-pY216 (BioSource International, Camarillo, CA), anti-b-actin (Sigma), anti-p38, which recognizes phosphorylated Thr-180 and Tyr-182 (Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly, MA), and anti-CDK5, which recognizes amino acids 268–283 (Calbiochem).

Ab1–40 and Ab1–42 levels were measured by using a sensitive sandwich ELISA system. Maxisorp immunoplates (Nalge Nunc) were coated with monoclonal antibody 20.1, a specific antibody against Ab1–16 (from William E. Van Nostrand, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY). After incubation of sample the plates were washed and probed with either horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-Ab 35–40 (MM32–13.1.1 for Ab40) or anti-Ab 35–42 (MM40–21.3.4 for Ab42) overnight at 4°C. 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine was used as the chromagen, and the reaction was stopped with the addition of 30% O-phosphoric acid and read at 450 nm on a plate reader (Labsystems, Sunnyvale, CA).

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