Abstract

BackgroundAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a fatal disease that threatens the quality of life of an aging population at a global scale. Various hypotheses on the etiology of AD have been developed over the years to guide efforts in search of therapeutic strategies.Main bodyIn this review, we focus on four AD hypotheses currently relevant to AD onset: the prevailing amyloid cascade hypothesis, the well-recognized tau hypothesis, the increasingly popular pathogen (viral infection) hypothesis, and the infection-related antimicrobial protection hypothesis. In briefly reviewing the main evidence supporting each hypothesis and discussing the questions that need to be addressed, we hope to gain a better understanding of the complicated multi-layered interactions in potential causal and/or risk factors in AD pathogenesis. As a defining feature of AD, the existence of amyloid deposits is likely fundamental to AD onset but is insufficient to wholly reproduce many complexities of the disorder. A similar belief is currently also applied to hyperphosphorylated tau aggregates within neurons, where tau has been postulated to drive neurodegeneration in the presence of pre-existing Aβ plaques in the brain. Although infection of the central nerve system by pathogens such as viruses may increase AD risk, it is yet to be determined whether this phenomenon is applicable to all cases of sporadic AD and whether it is a primary trigger for AD onset. Lastly, the antimicrobial protection hypothesis provides insight into a potential physiological role for Aβ peptides, but how Aβ/microbial interactions affect AD pathogenesis during aging awaits further validation. Nevertheless, this hypothesis cautions potential adverse effects in Aβ-targeting therapies by hindering potential roles for Aβ in anti-viral protection.ConclusionAD is a multi-factor complex disorder, which likely requires a combinatorial therapeutic approach to successfully slow or reduce symptomatic memory decline. A better understanding of how various causal and/or risk factors affecting disease onset and progression will enhance the likelihood of conceiving effective treatment paradigms, which may involve personalized treatment strategies for individual patients at varying stages of disease progression.

Highlights

  • Amyloid cascade hypothesis The amyloid cascade hypothesis has undoubtedly had the greatest influence on Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research for nearly three decades

  • These clinical symptoms may be indicative of AD onset, definitive diagnosis requires the detection of three pathological hallmarks in the brain, namely, extracellular amyloid composed of Aβ peptides, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) formed by hyperphosphorylated tau, and degeneration in brain regions such as the entorhinal cortex, hippocampus, and cerebral cortex during late stages of onset [7, 16]

  • No definitive conclusions can be made with respect to a causal role for HSV infection in AD, since APOE status and clinical AD characterization is lacking in the study, dramatic reduction in dementia risk with anti-herpetic treatment suggests that viral infection may be a serious risk factor that increases likelihood of dementia onset if left untreated

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Summary

Conclusion

AD is a multi-factor complex disorder, which likely requires a combinatorial therapeutic approach to successfully slow or reduce symptomatic memory decline.

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