Some evolutionary perspectives on Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis and pathology
Abstract
There is increasing urgency to develop effective prevention and treatment for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) as the aging population swells. Yet, our understanding remains limited for the elemental pathophysiological mechanisms of AD dementia that may be causal, compensatory, or epiphenomenal. To this end, we consider AD and why it exists from the perspectives of natural selection, adaptation, genetic drift, and other evolutionary forces. We discuss the connection between the apolipoprotein E (APOE) allele and AD, with special consideration to APOE ɛ4 as the ancestral allele. The phylogeny of AD-like changes across species is also examined, and pathology and treatment implications of AD are discussed from the perspective of evolutionary medicine. In particular, amyloid-β (Aβ) neuritic plaques and paired helical filament tau (PHFtau) neurofibrillary tangles have been traditionally viewed as injurious pathologies to be targeted, but may be preservative or restorative processes that mitigate harmful neurodegenerative processes or may be epiphenoma of the essential processes that cause neurodegeneration. Thus, we raise fundamental questions about current strategies for AD prevention and therapeutics
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I am working in the area of dementia and developed a brainfood project as a way of preventing or at least lowing down of deterioration. A lot more can be done. I agree with you that the laying down of plaques could be a way of compensation for lack of energy as the body will always adapt to changing conditions but it can also maladapt and produce disease.
I am thinking of starting a crowdfunding project for an observational study using Endobiogenic Medicine (based on systems biology) to identify the maladaptive processes in a certain number of individuals with MCI or early AD and then offer them treatment to rebalance the system in a way that it reduces the need for compensation.
I have written a couple of article related to evolutionary and systemic perspective taking:
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/anna-betz/dementia-narrow-perspecti_b_8363362.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/anna-betz/an-evolutionary-perspective-on-medicine_b_8217254.html
Anna Betz