Fisher_2000_Ann.N.Y.Acad.Sci_920_315

Reference

Title : M1 muscarinic agonists as potential disease-modifying agents in Alzheimer's disease. Rationale and perspectives - Fisher_2000_Ann.N.Y.Acad.Sci_920_315
Author(s) : Fisher A , Michaelson DM , Brandeis R , Haring R , Chapman S , Pittel Z
Ref : Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences , 920 :315 , 2000
Abstract :

A cholinergic hypofunction in Alzheimer's disease (AD) may lead to formation of beta-amyloids that might impair the coupling of M1 muscarinic ACh receptors (mAChRs) with G proteins. This disruption in coupling can lead to decreased signal transduction, to a reduction in levels of trophic amyloid precursor proteins (APPs), and to generation of more beta-amyloids that can also suppress ACh synthesis and release, aggravating further the cholinergic deficiency. These "vicious cycles," a presynaptic and a postsynaptic one, may be inhibited, in principle, by M1 selective agonists. Such properties can be detected in the functionally selective M1 agonists from the AF series [e.g., project drugs, AF102B, AF150(S)]. These M1 agonists promote the nonamyloidogenic APP processing pathways and decrease tau protein phosphorylation. The effects on tau proteins suggest a link between M1 mAChR-mediated signal transduction system(s) and the neuronal cytoskeleton via regulation of phosphorylation of tau microtubule-associated protein. This may indicate a dual role for M1 agonists: as inhibitors of two "vicious cycles," one induced by beta-amyloids, and the other due to overactivation of certain kinases (e.g., glycogen synthase kinase-3, GSK-3) or downregulation of phosphatases, respectively. Prolonged administration of AF150(S) in apolipoprotein E-knockout mice restored cognitive impairments, cholinergic hypofunction, and tau hyperphosphorylation, and unveiled a high-affinity binding site to M1 mAChRs. Except M1 agonists, there are no reports of compounds having such combined effects, for example, amelioration of cognition dysfunction and beneficial modulation of APPs together with tau phosphorylation. This unique property of M1 agonists to alter different aspects of AD pathogenesis could represent the most remarkable, yet unexplored, clinical value of such compounds.

PubMedSearch : Fisher_2000_Ann.N.Y.Acad.Sci_920_315
PubMedID: 11193170

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Citations formats

Fisher A, Michaelson DM, Brandeis R, Haring R, Chapman S, Pittel Z (2000)
M1 muscarinic agonists as potential disease-modifying agents in Alzheimer's disease. Rationale and perspectives
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 920 :315

Fisher A, Michaelson DM, Brandeis R, Haring R, Chapman S, Pittel Z (2000)
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 920 :315