Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/18640

TítuloStress acts cumulatively to precipitate Alzheimer’s disease-like tau pathology and cognitive deficits
Autor(es)Sotiropoulos, I.
Catania, C.
Pinto, Lucilia G.
Silva, Rui
Pollerberg, G. Elizabeth
Takashima, Akihiko
Sousa, Nuno
Almeida, O. F. X.
DataMai-2011
EditoraSociety for Neuroscience
RevistaJournal of Neuroscience
Resumo(s)Stressful life experiences are likely tiological factors in sporadic forms of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Many AD patients hypersecrete glucocorticoids (GCs), and their GC levels correlate with the rate of cognitive impairment and extent of neuronal atrophy. Severity of cognitive deficits in AD correlates strongly with levels of perphosphorylated forms of the cytoskeletal protein TAU, an essential mediator of the actions of amyloid Beta (ABeta ), another molecule with a key pathogenic role in AD. Our objective was to investigate the sequential interrelationships between these various pathogenic elements, in particular with respect to the mechanisms through which stress might precipitate cognitive decline. We thus examined whether stress, through the mediation of GCs, influences TAU hyperphosphorylation, a critical and early event in the cascade of processes leading to AD pathology. Results from healthy, wild-type, middle-aged rats show that chronic stress and GC induce abnormal hyperphosphorylation of TAU in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex (PFC), with contemporaneous impairments of hippocampus- and PFC-dependent behaviors. Exogenous GC potentiated the ability of centrally infused ABeta to induce hyperphosphorylation of TAU epitopes associated with AD and cytoplasmic accumulation of TAU, while previous exposure to stress aggravated the biochemical and behavioral effects of GC in ABeta-infused animals. Thus, lifetime stress/GC exposure may have a cumulative impact on the onset and progress of AD pathology, with TAU hyperphosphorylation serving to transduce the negative effects of stress and GC on cognition.
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/18640
DOI10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0730-11.2011
ISSN1529-2401
Versão da editorahttp://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/21/7840.long
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:ICVS - Artigos em revistas internacionais / Papers in international journals

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