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The oxidatively damaged DNA and amyloid-β oligomer hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease

Authors :
Owen Davis Sanders
Jayalekshmi Archa Rajagopal
Lekshmy Rajagopal
Source :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine. 179:403-412
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The amyloid-β (Aβ) oligomer hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) still dominates the field, yet the clinical trial evidence does not robustly support it. A falsifiable prediction of the hypothesis is that Aβ oligomer levels should be elevated in the brain regions and at the disease stages where and when neuron death and synaptic protein loss begin and are the most severe, but we review previous evidence to demonstrate that this is not consistently the case. To rescue the Aβ oligomer hypothesis from falsification, we propose the novel ad-hoc hypothesis that the exceptionally vulnerable hippocampus may normally produce Aβ peptides even in healthily aging individuals, and hippocampal oxidatively damaged DNA, pathogen DNA, and metal ions such as zinc may initiate and drive Aβ peptide aggregation into oligomers and spreading, neuron death, synaptic dysfunction, and other aspects of AD neurodegeneration. We highlight additional evidence consistent with the underwhelming efficacy of Aβ oligomer-lowering agents, such as aducanumab, and of antioxidants, such as vitamin E, versus the so far isolated case report that DNase-I treatment for 2 months resulted in a severe AD patient's Mini-Mental State Exam score increasing from 3 to 18, reversing his diagnosis to moderate AD, according to the Mini-Mental State Exam.

Details

ISSN :
08915849
Volume :
179
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b1eba76c1915fc2dcf32969c1aa9db3