Publication: Alzheimer's disease: the amyloid hypothesis and the Inverse Warburg effect
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Date
2015
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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Citation
Demetrius, Lloyd A., Pierre J. Magistretti, and Luc Pellerin. 2015. “Alzheimer's disease: the amyloid hypothesis and the Inverse Warburg effect.” Frontiers in Physiology 5 (1): 522. doi:10.3389/fphys.2014.00522. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2014.00522.
Research Data
Abstract
Epidemiological and biochemical studies show that the sporadic forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are characterized by the following hallmarks: (a) An exponential increase with age; (b) Selective neuronal vulnerability; (c) Inverse cancer comorbidity. The present article appeals to these hallmarks to evaluate and contrast two competing models of AD: the amyloid hypothesis (a neuron-centric mechanism) and the Inverse Warburg hypothesis (a neuron-astrocytic mechanism). We show that these three hallmarks of AD conflict with the amyloid hypothesis, but are consistent with the Inverse Warburg hypothesis, a bioenergetic model which postulates that AD is the result of a cascade of three events—mitochondrial dysregulation, metabolic reprogramming (the Inverse Warburg effect), and natural selection. We also provide an explanation for the failures of the clinical trials based on amyloid immunization, and we propose a new class of therapeutic strategies consistent with the neuroenergetic selection model.
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Keywords
Hypothesis and Theory Article, age-related disease, mitochondrial dysregulation, metabolic alteration, the Inverse Warburg effect, inverse cancer comorbidity
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