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Issue title: Physiopathology of Vascular Risk Factors in Alzheimer's Disease
Guest editors: Jack de la Torre
Article type: Review Article
Authors: Cortes-Canteli, Marta | Zamolodchikov, Daria | Ahn, Hyung Jin | Strickland, Sidney | Norris, Erin H.; *
Affiliations: Laboratory of Neurobiology and Genetics, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA
Correspondence: [*] Correspondence to: Erin H. Norris, PhD, Laboratory of Neurobiology and Genetics, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065, USA. Tel.: +1 212 327 8707; Fax: +1 212 327 8774; E-mail: enorris@rockefeller.edu.
Abstract: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques, tau tangles, brain atrophy, and vascular pathology. Vascular defects include cerebrovascular dysfunction, decreased cerebral blood flow, and blood brain barrier (BBB) disruption, among others. Here, we review the evidence that links Aβ with the vascular pathology present in AD, with a specific focus on the hemostatic system and the clotting protein fibrinogen. Fibrinogen is normally found circulating in blood, but in AD it deposits with Aβ in the brain parenchyma and cerebral blood vessels. We found that Aβ and fibrin(ogen) interact, and their binding leads to increased fibrinogen aggregation, Aβ fibrillization, and the formation of degradation-resistant fibrin clots. Decreasing fibrinogen levels not only lessens cerebral amyloid angiopathy and BBB permeability, but it also reduces microglial activation and improves cognitive performance in AD mouse models. Moreover, a prothrombotic state in AD is evidenced by increased clot formation, decreased fibrinolysis, and elevated levels of coagulation factors and activated platelets. Abnormal deposition and persistence of fibrin(ogen) in AD may result from Aβ-fibrin(ogen) binding and altered hemostasis and could thus contribute to Aβ deposition, decreased cerebral blood flow, exacerbated neuroinflammation, and eventual neurodegeneration. Blocking the interaction between fibrin(ogen) and Aβ may be a promising therapeutic target for AD.
Keywords: Blood brain barrier, blood coagulation, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, fibrinogen, hemostasis, thrombosis
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-2012-120820
Journal: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, vol. 32, no. 3, pp. 599-608, 2012
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