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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Chow N, Bell RD, Deane R, Streb JW, Chen J, Brooks A, Van Nostrand W, Miano JM, Zlokovic BV. Serum response factor and myocardin mediate arterial hypercontractility and cerebral blood flow dysregulation in Alzheimer's phenotype. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Jan 16;104(3):823-8. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Thomas Beach
Submitted 16 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 16 January 2007

This interesting study suggests a molecular mechanism that may explain how CAA contributes to dementia. Clinical studies have indicated that CAA contributes to the dementia in AD, and it has been apparent for decades that CAA eventually results in vascular smooth muscle death. This would obviously lead to dysregulation of cerebral blood flow, something that can't be good for brain function. The work of Chow, Zlokovic, and colleagues shows that serum response factor and myocardin are both upregulated in AD vascular smooth muscle cells, and that this may lead to vascular hypercontractility. This suggests that blood flow abnormalities in AD may exist prior to vascular smooth muscle cell death and that SRF/myocardin may represent new therapeutic targets for improving cerebral blood flow, and hence cognition, in AD. Furthermore, the data may have relevance for other forms of CAA, such as British, Danish, Dutch, and Icelandic.

It is a little surprising that exogenously applied Aβ does not initiate the entire process. This leaves the initial stimulus for the SRF/myocardin...  Read more


  Comment by:  Roy O. Weller
Submitted 19 January 2007  |  Permalink Posted 19 January 2007

The present paper by Chow et al. brings into sharp focus the significance of vascular factors in Alzheimer disease (AD). Age is a major risk factor for both AD and for cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease. The most prominent pathology associated with vascular dementia, and with many cases of AD, is large and small cerebral infarcts. But, as highlighted by Chow et al., the role of cerebrovascular disease in dementia may go way beyond infarction. They suggest that elevated serum response factor (SRF) and myocardin activity in vascular smooth muscle cells in AD results in hypercontractility in small arteries in the brain. This would lead to hypoperfusion of the brain and to the neurovascular uncoupling and failure of autoregulation that is commonly seen in AD.

In addition to infarction and hypoperfusion, there is a third aspect of cerebrovascular disease to consider. Age changes in cerebral arteries include arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis, so that even in those arteries that lack atherosclerotic plaques there is often an increase in stiffness of the vessel walls with...  Read more

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