Abstract

Free radical-mediated oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and excitotoxicity have long been considered insults relevant to the progression of Alzheimer's disease and other aging-related neurodegenerative disorders (NDD). Among these phenomena, the significance of oxidative stress and, more generally, redox perturbations, for NDD remain ill-defined and unsubstantiated. Here, I argue that (i) free radical-mediated oxidations of biomolecules can be dissociated from the progression of NDD, (ii) oxidative stress fails as a descriptor of cellular redox states under conditions relevant to disease, and (iii) aberrant upregulation of compensatory reducing activities in neural cells, resulting in reductive shifts in thiol-based redox potentials, may be an overlooked and paradoxical contributor to disease progression. In particular, I summarize evidence which supports the view that reductive shifts in the extracellular space can occur in response to oxidant and inflammatory signals and that these have the potential to reduce putative regulatory disulfide bonds in exofacial domains of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor, leading potentially to aberrant increases in neuronal excitability and, if sustained, excitotoxicity. The novel reductive reprogramming hypothesis of neurodegeneration presented here provides an alternative view of redox perturbations in NDD and links these to both neuroinflammation and excitotoxicity.

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