Wu_2023_Neuron__

Reference

Title : Hepatic soluble epoxide hydrolase activity regulates cerebral Abeta metabolism and the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease in mice - Wu_2023_Neuron__
Author(s) : Wu Y , Dong JH , Dai YF , Zhu MZ , Wang MY , Zhang Y , Pan YD , Yuan XR , Guo ZX , Wang CX , Li YQ , Zhu XH
Ref : Neuron , : , 2023
Abstract :

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is caused by a complex interaction between genetic and environmental factors. However, how the role of peripheral organ changes in response to environmental stimuli during aging in AD pathogenesis remains unknown. Hepatic soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) activity increases with age. Hepatic sEH manipulation bidirectionally attenuates brain amyloid-beta (Abeta) burden, tauopathy, and cognitive deficits in AD mouse models. Moreover, hepatic sEH manipulation bidirectionally regulates the plasma level of 14,15-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid (-EET), which rapidly crosses the blood-brain barrier and modulates brain Abeta metabolism through multiple pathways. A balance between the brain levels of 14,15-EET and Abeta is essential for preventing Abeta deposition. In AD models, 14,15-EET infusion mimicked the neuroprotective effects of hepatic sEH ablation at biological and behavioral levels. These results highlight the liver's key role in AD pathology, and targeting the liver-brain axis in response to environmental stimuli may constitute a promising therapeutic approach for AD prevention.

PubMedSearch : Wu_2023_Neuron__
PubMedID: 37402372
Gene_locus related to this paper: human-EPHX2

Related information

Substrate 14,15-EET
Gene_locus human-EPHX2
Family Epoxide_hydrolase

Citations formats

Wu Y, Dong JH, Dai YF, Zhu MZ, Wang MY, Zhang Y, Pan YD, Yuan XR, Guo ZX, Wang CX, Li YQ, Zhu XH (2023)
Hepatic soluble epoxide hydrolase activity regulates cerebral Abeta metabolism and the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease in mice
Neuron :

Wu Y, Dong JH, Dai YF, Zhu MZ, Wang MY, Zhang Y, Pan YD, Yuan XR, Guo ZX, Wang CX, Li YQ, Zhu XH (2023)
Neuron :