Is Alzheimer’s Disease a Disorder of
Energy Metabolism? New Study Shines New Light
By Laura Neves,McLean Hospital
McLean Hospital is the largest psychiatric affiliate of Harvard Medical School
and a member of Partners HealthCare. In 2017, it was named the #1 hospital for
psychiatric care in the United
States by U.S. News &
World Report.
http://www.mcleanhospital.org/news/2017/10/26/alzheimers-disease-disorder-energy-metabolism-new-study-shines-new-light
By Laura Neves,
October
26, 2017 -- Belmont, MA -- A team of investigators from
McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School, led by Kai C. Sonntag, MD, PhD, and
Bruce M. Cohen, MD, PhD, has found a connection between disrupted energy
production and the development of late-onset Alzheimer’s disease (LOAD). The
findings appear in the current issue of Scientific Reports.
“These findings have several
implications for understanding and developing potential therapeutic
intervention in LOAD,” explained Sonntag, an associate stem cell researcher at McLean Hospital
and an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School . “Our results
support the hypothesis that impairment in multiple interacting components of bioenergetics
metabolism may be a key mechanism underlying and contributing to the risk and
pathophysiology of this devastating illness.”
For three decades, it has been
thought that the accumulation of small toxic molecules in the brain, called
amyloid beta, or in short, Aβ, is central to the development of Alzheimer’s
disease (AD). Strong evidence came from studying familial or early-onset forms
of AD (EOAD) that affect about five percent of AD patients and have
associations with mutations leading to abnormally high levels or abnormal
processing of Aβ in the brain. However, the “Aβ hypothesis” has been
insufficient to explain the pathological changes in the more common LOAD, which
affects more than 5 million seniors in the United States .
“Because late-onset Alzheimer’s is a
disease of age, many physiologic changes with age may contribute to risk for
the disease, including changes in bioenergetics and metabolism,” said Cohen,
director of the Program for Neuropsychiatric Research at McLean
Hospital and the Robertson-Steele
Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School .
“Bioenergetics is the production, usage, and exchange of energy within and
between cells or organs, and the environment. It has long been known that
bioenergetic changes occur with aging and affect the whole body, but more so
the brain, with its high need for energy.”
According to Sonntag and Cohen, it
has been less clear what changes in bioenergetics are underlying and which are
a consequence of aging and illness.
In their study, Sonntag and Cohen
analyzed the bioenergetic profiles of skin fibroblasts from LOAD patients and
healthy controls, as a function of age and disease. The scientists looked at
the two main components that produce energy in cells: glycolysis, which is the
mechanism to convert glucose into fuel molecules for consumption by
mitochondria, and burning of these fuels in the mitochondria, which use
oxygen in a process called oxidative phosphorylation or mitochondrial
respiration. The investigators found that LOAD cells exhibited impaired
mitochondrial metabolism, with a reduction in molecules that are important in
energy production, including nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD). LOAD
fibroblasts also demonstrated a shift in energy production to glycolysis,
despite an inability to increase glucose uptake in response to the insulin
analog IGF-1. Both the abnormal mitochondrial metabolism and the increase of
glycolysis in LOAD cells were disease- and not age-specific, while diminished
glucose uptake and the inability to respond to IGF-1 was a feature of both age
and disease.
“The observation that LOAD
fibroblasts had a deficiency in the mitochondrial metabolic potential and an
increase in the glycolytic activity to maintain energy supply is indicative of
failing mitochondria and fits with current knowledge that aging cells
increasingly suffer from oxidative stress that impairs their mitochondrial
energy production,” said Sonntag.
Cohen added that because the brain’s
nerve cells rely almost entirely on mitochondria-derived energy, failure of
mitochondrial function, while seen throughout the body, might be particularly
detrimental in the brain.
The study’s results link to findings
from other studies that decreasing energy-related molecules (and specifically
NAD) are features of normal aging by suggesting that abnormalities in processes
involving these molecules may also be a factor in neurodegenerative diseases
like LOAD. Whether modulating these compounds could slow the aging process and
prevent or delay the onset of LOAD is unknown. However, several clinical trials
are currently under way to test this possibility. Other changes are unique to
AD, and these, too, may be targets for intervention.
While these findings are significant,
the paper’s authors emphasize that the pathogenesis of LOAD is multifactorial,
with bioenergetics being one part of risk determination and note that the skin
fibroblasts studied are not the primary cell type that is affected in LOAD.
“However, because bioenergetics
changes are body-wide, observations made in fibroblasts may also be relevant to
brain cells,” said Sonntag. “In fact, metabolic changes like diminished glucose
uptake and insulin/IGF-1 resistance may underlie the association between
various disorders of aging, such as type 2 diabetes and AD.”
Sonntag and Cohen are already in the
midst of follow-up work aiming to study these bioenergetics features in brain
nerve cells and astrocytes generated from LOAD patient-derived induced
pluripotent stem cells, as an aging and disease model in the dish. It is the
group’s hope that findings from these studies will reveal further insight into
the role of bioenergetics in LOAD pathogenesis and novel targets for
intervention—both prevention and treatment.
http://www.mcleanhospital.org/news/2017/10/26/alzheimers-disease-disorder-energy-metabolism-new-study-shines-new-light
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